Five gadgets for serious gamers – Financial Times

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                            We use                              <a href="http://help.ft.com/help/legal-privacy/cookies/" class="o-cookie-message__link o-cookie-message__link--external" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-n-messaging-policy>cookies</a>                                 for a number of reasons, such as keeping FT Sites reliable and secure,                              personalising content and ads, providing social media features and to                               analyse how our Sites are used.                             <br>                                    <span class="o-message__content-highlight">Your guide to a disrupted world</span>                           <br><a class="n-content-tag--author" href="/stream/4f21e685-d036-3293-9ee2-83d5f8b7156a" data-trackable="author">Jamie Waters</a><br><span>We’ll send you a <i>myFT Daily Digest</i> email rounding up the latest <!-- -->Gaming<!-- --> news every morning.</span><br><strong>The racing sim that&#x2019;s miles ahead</strong><br>As a teenager I was once described by a friend as an &#x201C;objectively bad driver&#x201D;, but I&#x2019;m hoping that the crimson Ferrari F2004 that took Michael Schumacher to a record 13 victories in&#xA0;a season can do similar wonders for me. I&#x2019;m&#xA0;on the Monza racetrack in northern Italy with it all to&#xA0;play for. I put my foot down on the main straight, hitting&#xA0;320kmph before losing control in a hairy chicane. As&#xA0;the wheels skid across the grass, my arms strain to contain the&#xA0;steering wheel and my whole body judders. The&#xA0;Ferrari spins before slamming into a wall with a jolt. Perhaps my friend was right.&#xA0;<br>For professional racers, it&#x2019;s clearly very useful. For everyone else, it&#x2019;s just unbelievably fun<br>I&#x2019;m not actually driving the great German&#x2019;s car at the Italian Grand Prix, of course. I&#x2019;m behind the wheel of an extraordinarily realistic simulation created by Axsim, a spinoff from Cranfield Aerospace, the engineering company&#xA0;that for 25 years has produced fighter-jet and motorsport simulators for&#xA0;the military and professional racers respectively. The technology behind the Formula Simulator is used by F1 and Nascar teams &#x2013; but this machine is available to members of the public with&#xA0;money to spare. The machine, which&#xA0;connects to any monitor, has&#xA0;the form of&#xA0;an F1 car:&#xA0;you fold&#xA0;yourself inside before stretching out your legs.&#xA0;It&#xA0;has a real steering wheel &#x2013; complete with paddles and buttons &#x2013; and hydraulic pedals&#xA0;that take some&#xA0;force to&#xA0;get&#xA0;going. Its&#xA0;physicality is&#xA0;addictive: it&#x2019;s fitted with the only haptic&#xA0;technology approved by the FIA&#xA0;(motorsport&#x2019;s governing body), so it&#xA0;rocks and gyrates&#xA0;with every acceleration and turn.&#xA0;<br>You can choose from countless cars &#x2013; vintage and contemporary &#x2013; and the simulator will mimic the feel of that model. And the software uses laser scans of the world&#x2019;s&#xA0;biggest race circuits so that each real-life bump in the&#xA0;track surface is replicated on the screen, and through every bone in your body. The options for customisation &#x2013; adding&#xA0;cars, tracks and functions &#x2013; are endless. For professional racers, it&#x2019;s clearly very useful. For everyone else, it&#x2019;s just unbelievably fun.&#xA0;<em>Axsim Formula Simulator from &#xA3;39,900 (more compact models available from &#xA3;16,400), </em><a href="http://www.axsim.racing/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" data-trackable="link"><em>axsim.racing</em></a><br><strong>Like a Game Boy with benefits</strong><br>Thank you, Analogue Pocket, for reminding me that it is indeed possible to while away a night &#x2013; or was that a weekend? &#x2013; in Super Mario Land. This console will have you pulsing with dopamine and tingling with nostalgia. Made by a startup not linked to Nintendo, it is essentially a Game Boy 2.0 (don&#x2019;t worry, it&#x2019;s entirely legal). It mimics the form of the now-extinct handheld and runs the 2,780-plus original Nintendo games. But it has been given a 21st-century glow-up, with a gorgeous matte black (or white) finish and a backlit LCD screen whose resolution is 10x sharper than the original Game Boy. Pure kryptonite for a Gen Xer or millennial whose heart is still in the &#x2019;90s. <em>Analogue Pocket, $219, </em><a href="https://www.analogue.co/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" data-trackable="link"><em>analogue.co</em></a><br><strong>An out-of-this-world Alienware gaming screen</strong><br>With an elongated screen that boasts pin-sharp clarity and curves gently like a just-unfurled belt, the new 34in gaming monitor from Dell-owned Alienware is a novel release. It&#x2019;s the first desktop monitor to be fitted with Samsung&#x2019;s new Quantum Dot OLED panel (coming to the Korean brand&#x2019;s TVs this year), which combines the brightness of QD with the high contrast and true blacks of OLED. It looks super-sharp to the naked eye, with a 3440x1440 resolution, a 175Hz refresh rate and a&#xA0;0.1ms response time. Oh, and it perches on a stand that enables it to&#xA0;swivel and slide up and down to meet you on your level. <em>Alienware AW3423DW monitor, $1,299, </em><a href="https://www.dell.com/en-uk" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" data-trackable="link"><em>dell.com</em></a><br><strong>A Steam-driven portable&#xA0;console</strong><br>Fancy playing your favourite PC games on the go? For the first time, you can. Steam, the world&#x2019;s biggest PC game distributor, has launched a handheld console. The Steam Deck, which doubles as a mini Linux PC, is hugely impressive yet very much a work in progress. It&#x2019;s sturdily built and&#xA0;comfortable to hold, but its fan whirs audibly and some games glitch.&#xA0;Valve, Steam&#x2019;s owner, says it will be continually updating the software, so things should become smoother by the day. Although currently far from perfect, it is a trailblazer. It&#x2019;s available to pre-order and will ship towards the end of the year. <em>Steam Deck, $399, </em><a href="https://store.steampowered.com/steamdeck" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" data-trackable="link"><em>store.steampowered.com/steamdeck</em></a><br><strong>Headphones that just keep on&#xA0;playing</strong><br>These new wireless headphones from gaming specialist HyperX promise up to 300 hours of running time &#x2013; on 50 per cent volume &#x2013; before needing recharging. That&#x2019;s a month of games. Given that the average stamina for good wireless headphones is about 30 hours, it&#x2019;s a remarkable feat (HyperX cites developments in chip and battery technology). The Cloud Alphas are decent headphones anyway, with a fairly light aluminium frame, a removable noise-cancelling microphone, enhanced simulated surround sound, and meaty, dual-chamber 50mm drivers. But, really, you&#x2019;re getting these so you can enjoy time away from wall sockets.&#xA0;<em>Cloud Alpha, &#xA3;189.99, </em><a href="https://www.hyperxgaming.com/en" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" data-trackable="link"><em>hyperxgaming.com</em></a><br><a href="https://www.instagram.com/jamie_waters/?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" data-trackable="link"><em>@jamie_waters</em></a><br>Get alerts on <!-- -->Gaming<!-- --> when a new story is published<br>International Edition<br><br><a href="https://www.ft.com/content/413c8dca-3e17-4571-b26f-64e751f318d9">source</a>