
The deals have been kind of slow the past 48 hours, but here are some great updates on PC Hardware. There is a 50% Off sale for Logitech products, Radeon R9 280 at a low $154.99, the new Amazon Fire TV Stick discounted at $24.99, and more great deals.

The PS5 has ended up dominating Black Friday sales in the US, while the Xbox Series X|S consoles have fallen short of reaching third place.
X|S losing in UK and, most importantly in the US by ~5-6:1 to PS5 is a very rare and telling sight.
If we hadn't come to know about Xbox execs internal plans, quote: "[...] to push Sony out of business.", trying to buy out Nintendo, Valve, Sega, make From Software games exclusive to GP, CD Projekt Red, and ultimately buying Zenimax and ActivisionBlizzardKing to weaken Playstation's revenue stream and force GP onto other platforms, I would quite certainly have said now: "That's very unfortunate for Xbox!"
But I admit, knowing all of that, that I don't share any pity for Xbox whatsoever.
Well done PS5 again. Launched over 5 years ago and still going strong. Massive success.
"NEX Playground ranked third (14%), leaving Xbox Series X|S consoles in the likely fourth place."
I follow gaming news very regularly and I follow a few gaming channels on youtube, I've never even heard of NEX Playground. What the hell even is that? (rhetorical, I know I can just google it) The fact Xbox is losing to that is extremely embarrassing.
The PS5 shows no signs of slowing down. Five years after release, it commanded the Black Friday market in the US, UK, and Spain, responsible for nearly half of all units sold
Microsoft is a 4 trillion dollar company. The 23.5 billion dollars that it's gaming departments has brought in equals about half of one percent of that. If anything, Microsoft can drop it's gaming divisions and not bat an eye. And they should. Because they can't seem to make it work.

A live-action "Life Is Strange" TV series has been greenlit at Amazon Prime Video, Variety has learned exclusively.

Amazon has spent the last 15 years plus trying to disrupt Steam's gaming market, but have ultimately failed to "crack the code."