Review: Razer Kiyo

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Interests

Thanks to Razer for providing GWW with this Kiyo camera.

When the world changed earlier this year, PC cameras became an absolute necessity as many who were able to be were relegated to working from home. After hours spent on Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and many other virtual meeting options, I can say that the Razer Kiyo is a standout device in a digital workspace.

THE IMAGE

The Kiyo is a streaming camera at heart. It can shift between 720p resolution at 60 fps and 1080p at 30 fps depending on your needs. Additionally, the built-in ring light (which features variable brightness) will ensure that you can find the right illumination for your beautiful face. Sadly, there is no Chroma. 

You will look super cool with the Razer Kiyo.

THE SOFTWARE

Honestly, some of the coolest features of the Kiyo lie in the Razer Synapse software. The adjustability is quite impressive. Of course, you can adjust the brightness, contrast, saturation, and sharpness. However, you can also zoom, pan, and tilt and the quality of the image does not degrade at all. 

THE PRICE

At $99 US, the Kiyo is a bit of a premium. However, consider the very friendly built-in ring light and the Razer Synapse software and you have a very reasonable package. I am the type of person that must have matching kitchen appliances, and that OCD personality trait carries over into my office. If you are like me, dropping the money to pick up Razer’s impressive Kiyo simply to match your peripherals is a good deal. 

Razer said, “Let there be light.” And it was good.

THE CONCLUSION

If you are a little less concerned about such things, the Kiyo still provides an excellent “bang for your buck”. Do not take my word for it, check out what it is done to my professional image:

More than likely what you will look like on your stream or conference call.

By Kenney Newville

Kenney Newville was born in California but raised in Missouri. This left him very confused: he spoke much quicker than everyone else around him, but he was comfortable with the lower Midwest prices. Kenney spent his first year of college living in a Benedictine monastery, something that every young man in the 21st century did. After realizing the monastery wasn’t hard-core enough for him, he decided to move back to his home town of St. Joseph, MO to finish school. During his quest for a history diploma, he became indebted to GameStop and worked there in indentured servitude for one and a half years. Eventually, after getting married, Kenney escaped and travelled to the Far East to find himself. He taught English as a Second Language in South Korea for 16 months and, after the whole Korean peninsula learned to speak fluent American, he was forced to return home and find a real job. When he's not working, you can find him gaming, writing about games, or discussing them on the Gaming @ 30 podcast.

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