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EVERYDAY CARRY BLOG

The #1 Most Important Part of EDC That People Forget – FBI SWAT Operator Scott Payne

By Tactical, Video

Video Overview

A perspective worth hearing from the Dalton Fischer Podcast: FBI SWAT operator Scott Payne on the single most important element of everyday carry that most people overlook. Scott brings a level of professional credibility to this conversation that’s rare in the EDC space — his carry choices and philosophy are shaped by years of high-stakes operational experience, not YouTube trends or gear reviews. This clip gets at a question that most EDC content avoids: is the gear the point, or is something else driving whether your carry actually serves you when it matters?

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

This video focuses on EDC philosophy and mindset rather than specific products. No gear is reviewed or linked in the video description. For the full conversation with Scott Payne, see the complete interview on the Dalton Fischer Podcast.

If you’re looking to build out a carry kit that aligns with a trained, professional approach to EDC, the following categories are worth researching:

Editor’s Insight

Most EDC content is gear-first. The implicit assumption behind every flashlight comparison, every knife review, and every “what’s in my pocket” video is that better gear produces better outcomes. Scott Payne’s perspective challenges that assumption from a position most commentators don’t have: someone who has actually had to use their carry in life-threatening situations, and who has trained others to do the same.

The “most important part of EDC that people forget” framing is deliberately provocative because it implies the EDC community has gotten something wrong — not in what it carries, but in how it thinks about carrying. The gear community is exceptionally good at optimizing for weight, finish, steel composition, and deployment speed. It is considerably less focused on training, scenario planning, and the psychological dimension of actually using carry items under stress.

This gap between gear optimization and performance optimization is one of the more interesting tensions in the EDC world. A person who carries a $400 custom knife but has never trained to deploy it under stress, in low light, with an elevated heart rate, is objectively less prepared than someone carrying a $40 Kershaw with hundreds of hours of practical training. The gear community knows this abstractly but rarely discusses it, partly because gear is concrete and reviewable while training is experiential and hard to monetize.

FBI SWAT operators represent one end of the professional carry spectrum — a population that carries daily, trains relentlessly, and has their gear choices shaped by actual field outcomes rather than preferences or aesthetics. When someone from that background says the EDC community is forgetting something important, the honest response is to take the observation seriously rather than dismiss it as tactical posturing.

The training argument has been made before in the tactical and defensive carry communities, but it tends to stay siloed there — reaching the broader EDC audience that thinks of everyday carry primarily as utility and preparedness rather than defensive capability. Scott’s perspective, delivered in a conversational podcast format rather than a gun-culture context, potentially reaches an audience that the standard defensive carry channels don’t.

There’s also a mindset dimension worth examining. Carrying deliberately — knowing why each item is in your kit, what scenario it addresses, and how you’d actually use it — is meaningfully different from carrying because a specific item got a good review. The former produces a loadout shaped by your life and your likely scenarios. The latter produces a collection of well-reviewed items that may or may not serve your actual needs. The “most important part” that Payne references likely sits somewhere in that distinction.

For viewers who’ve built solid gear foundations and are looking for the next level of EDC development, this clip is worth the eight minutes — and the full interview even more so. The gear matters. But according to someone who has spent a career betting their life on both the gear and what they can do with it, gear is probably not the limiting factor for most everyday carriers. Credit to the Dalton Fischer Podcast for bringing this perspective to a broader audience.

Closing Remarks

Scott Payne’s take cuts to something the EDC community quietly knows but rarely addresses head-on: the gap between carrying gear and being prepared to use it. Whether you agree with his specific conclusion or not, the question he’s raising is worth sitting with. What does your training look like alongside your carry? Let us know in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no extra cost to you.

My Top 20 EDC Gear of the Last 5 Years – Jon Gadget

By Bags, Fashion, Gadgets, Tech, Tools, Travel, Video

Video Overview

A milestone video from Jon Gadget — five years of reviewing everyday carry gear distilled into his definitive top 20. Jon covers the full spectrum of EDC: flashlights, multi-tools, bags, tech accessories, clothing, and the small carry items that survive years of rotation and still earn a place in the loadout. What makes this list credible is the time horizon — these aren’t products he reviewed once and moved on from. These are the pieces he’s returned to consistently over half a decade of daily carry and travel. If you’re looking to build or refine an EDC kit with gear that actually lasts, this is worth watching from start to finish.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

Three items stand out as particularly distinctive. The Leatherman ARC represents Leatherman’s current flagship — titanium construction, one-hand tool deployment, and a design that finally addresses the locking mechanism complaints of earlier models. The Nitecore EDC37 pushes 4000 lumens from a pocket-sized body, positioning it among the most capable EDC flashlights at its size. And the Victorinox Companion Slim Alox shows Jon’s preference for refined minimalism — a Swiss Army knife that trims weight and bulk without sacrificing the core toolset.

Editor’s Insight

Five years is a meaningful time horizon in the EDC world. Gear trends cycle quickly — what’s considered essential in 2021 often looks dated by 2024. What survives that cycle is revealing. Jon Gadget’s top 20 list functions as an inadvertent filter: these are the products that held up to daily scrutiny across hundreds of reviews of competing options. That longevity is its own endorsement.

The Rovyvon A8 USB-C leads the list and its inclusion is telling. Rovyvon solved a specific problem elegantly: a AAA-sized keychain light with USB-C charging, which eliminates the proprietary charging hassle that made earlier Rovyvon models slightly inconvenient. At 650 lumens peak output from a form factor that disappears on a keychain, the A8 occupies a niche nothing else fills as well. Jon has reviewed dozens of keychain lights since, and the A8 keeps its spot.

The Leatherman ARC is the most significant tool on the list. Leatherman’s previous flagship — the Wave and Charge series — had earned a loyal following but accumulated design complaints over two decades: the blade deployed awkwardly, locking pliers weren’t standard, and the overall form factor had aged. The ARC addressed most of those complaints simultaneously: one-hand accessible blade, locking pliers, titanium scales, and a hinge design that holds up to heavy use. At $250, it’s a genuine investment, but for daily use over five years, it amortizes well.

The Nitecore EDC37 represents a specific flashlight philosophy: maximum output in minimum volume. At 4000 lumens, it exceeds what most users will ever need on a daily carry, but the lower modes — the 30-lumen everyday mode, the 1-lumen moonlight — are where you actually live with it day to day. High output is a rescue and emergency capability, not a daily use case. The EDC37’s value is that it gives you that rescue capability without requiring you to carry a larger light for everyday use.

The Bellroy items — Venture Sling 9L and Venture Ready Pack 20L — reflect Jon’s preference for bags that serve multiple contexts without specializing in any one. Bellroy’s strength is aesthetic restraint and organizational intelligence: bags that look at home in professional environments while carrying tech loadouts efficiently. The 9L sling and 20L pack represent different carry scenarios — one-bag travel versus daily commuting — that Jon rotates between depending on the day’s needs.

The Maxpedition pouch trio is worth examining as a system. The Pico, Micro, and Mini represent different organizational scales within the same modular philosophy. Maxpedition’s MOLLE-compatible design means they can attach to bags, belt loops, or larger packs — making them flexible organizational tools rather than standalone accessories. Jon including all three suggests he uses them as a modular system rather than a single pouch.

The Victorinox Companion Slim Alox and Victorinox Compact represent two different Swiss Army knife philosophies. The Compact is the classic urban EDC choice — scissors, blade, nail file, screwdriver, toothpick — in the standard 91mm form factor. The Companion Slim Alox is the modernized minimal version: fewer tools, Alox scales instead of cellidor, thinner profile. Both made the top 20, which suggests Jon uses them in different contexts rather than considering them redundant.

The more unusual inclusions — CuloClean, Matador NanoDry towel, NanoBag daypack — reflect the travel optimization angle that distinguishes Jon’s carry from pure gear enthusiasm. These are items that solve very specific friction points in travel: hygiene on the go, quick-dry after swimming, an ultralight packable layer for spontaneous shopping or overflow packing. They’re not glamorous EDC, but they represent the unglamorous-but-actually-useful category that makes travel meaningfully better. A big thanks to Jon Gadget for sharing five years of considered carry experience — watch the full video for his specific commentary on each item.

Closing Remarks

Jon Gadget’s top 20 after five years is one of the more honest gear roundups you’ll find — this is what actually survives the daily rotation, not what looks good in a review. Whether you’re building your first EDC kit or refining an established loadout, there’s something on this list worth your attention. What gear from your collection has stood the test of time? Share it in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no extra cost to you.

Budget Banger – Civivi Over Yonder Knife Review

By Tools, Video

Video Overview

Max LVL EDC delivers a focused look at the Civivi Over Yonder — a budget-tier folding knife that punches above its price point. Max LVL EDC has reviewed enough knives to know the difference between a genuinely good budget blade and one that just photographs well. The “budget banger” framing signals something specific: a knife that delivers real-world carry quality at a price that doesn’t require justification. If you’re shopping for an affordable everyday carry knife that won’t disappoint in use, this review is worth your time.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Civivi Over Yonder is the sole subject of this review — a compact folding knife from Civivi’s lineup that targets the $40-60 budget segment where the brand has built its reputation. Civivi has been one of the most consistent performers in budget EDC knives for several years, and the Over Yonder represents their latest entry in that category.

Editor’s Insight

Civivi has done something unusual in the knife market: built genuine brand credibility in the budget segment without chasing the mid-range. Most knife brands treat their sub-$60 lineup as a stepping stone — a way to get buyers into the ecosystem before they migrate up to premium offerings. Civivi treats the budget tier as a destination, and that orientation shows in the product quality their knives consistently deliver.

The Over Yonder name evokes something about the knife’s character: a blade designed for practical outdoor and EDC use without the aggressive tactical aesthetic that dominates much of the budget folding knife market. Civivi has a design language that tends toward clean lines, functional ergonomics, and blade geometries that prioritize slicing performance over visual aggression. The Over Yonder, based on that brand consistency, likely follows that template.

The “budget banger” classification is meaningful in the knife world precisely because the budget segment has genuine quality floors. Below a certain price point — roughly $30 — the steel choices, heat treatment, fit and finish, and deployment mechanisms typically reflect the economics. Civivi operates above that floor. Their steel selections in the $40-60 range — frequently 9Cr18MoV or similar mid-grade stainless alloys — deliver edge retention and corrosion resistance that outperforms what the price tag suggests, largely because Civivi’s manufacturing in China has optimized the cost-quality tradeoff more aggressively than Western brands typically manage.

Deployment mechanism matters more than most knife reviews acknowledge. A liner lock or frame lock that engages with a satisfying, positive click is a daily carry pleasure. A lockup that feels mushy, rattles, or requires adjustment right out of the box is a daily carry frustration. At the budget tier, deployment quality is often where cost-cutting shows first — and it’s where Civivi has historically differentiated. The Over Yonder’s deployment feel is one of the things Max LVL EDC’s hands-on review will directly address.

Blade geometry is the other dimension where affordable knives frequently compromise. A blade that looks interesting in photos but has too thick a grind behind the edge will push through material rather than slice it — functional, but nowhere near as capable as the same steel with a thinner grind. Civivi’s designers have generally understood that a thinner grind serves most EDC users better than a robust one, and their affordable blades typically reflect that understanding.

For everyday carry specifically, the pocket clip is a daily interaction point that reviews frequently undervalue. A clip that sits the knife too deep to grab quickly, loosens after a week of pocket cycling, or marks up pocket fabric is a constant minor irritant. A clip that positions the knife predictably, maintains tension across use, and doesn’t snag on pocket lining disappears into the carry experience in the best way. The Over Yonder’s clip design is worth noting when you watch the full review.

At the price point Civivi targets, the Over Yonder competes against offerings from Kershaw, Spyderco’s Byrd sub-brand, and other budget-tier lines. The honest comparison isn’t whether any of these knives are as good as a $150 Benchmade — they’re not, and they’re not trying to be. The comparison is whether they deliver reliable, pleasant daily carry at an approachable price, and Civivi’s track record says yes more consistently than most. Big thanks to Max LVL EDC for the hands-on evaluation — watch the full video for his specific take on edge geometry, deployment, and carry ergonomics.

Closing Remarks

The Civivi Over Yonder makes a strong case as a go-to budget EDC folder — a knife that delivers real carry quality without requiring a premium price justification. If you’re looking for a new daily carry blade that won’t leave you wishing you’d spent more, Max LVL EDC’s breakdown is the place to start. What knife is currently riding your pocket? Let us know in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no extra cost to you.

Turn Your Switch 2 Into a Portable TV – Arzopa Z1RC 2.5K Portable Monitor

By Gaming, Tech, Video

Video Overview

Nice find from Excessorize Me: a portable monitor that turns a Nintendo Switch 2 session into something closer to a full TV experience. The Arzopa Z1RC is a 16-inch 2.5K IPS display with a built-in kickstand, USB-C and HDMI connectivity, and a compact form factor built for travel and on-the-go use. This clip breaks down why it makes sense as a Switch 2 companion and what sets it apart from competing portable monitors in the 1080p budget category.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Arzopa Z1RC is the singular focus here — a 2560×1600 IPS panel that brings a genuine resolution upgrade over the 1080p portable monitors that have dominated this category. At 500 nits brightness and with hardware dithering to near-8-bit color accuracy, the Z1RC is built for content consumption and gaming in a way that entry-level portable monitors simply aren’t.

Editor’s Insight

The portable monitor category has matured considerably over the last few years, moving from cheap 1080p panels with mediocre color accuracy into a segment where 2K and 4K options at affordable prices are genuinely viable. The Arzopa Z1RC sits at an interesting inflection point: 2.5K resolution in a form factor that’s portable enough to carry in a sling bag alongside a Switch 2 or laptop.

The 2560×1600 resolution with a 16:10 aspect ratio is an underappreciated specification. Most portable monitors ship in 16:9 configurations that match laptop and TV content perfectly but leave letterboxing at the top and bottom for anything in taller formats. The 16:10 panel gives you extra vertical real estate — useful for productivity, more immersive for gaming content that renders at or near the native resolution, and visually distinct from the sea of 16:9 competitors at this price point.

For Switch 2 use specifically, the HDMI and USB-C inputs matter. The Switch 2 docks over USB-C directly, and most portable monitors support that connection natively for both display signal and power delivery. That means you can run the Switch 2 into the Arzopa via a single USB-C cable, eliminating the dock entirely for a cleaner portable setup. The HDMI port provides a backup for devices that don’t support USB-C DisplayPort alternate mode, making the Z1RC versatile across gaming consoles, laptops, and phones.

The built-in kickstand is a feature that sounds trivial until you’ve struggled to prop a portable monitor against a wall or a bag in a hotel room. A solid integrated kickstand means the monitor stands independently at a usable viewing angle, which is essential for any setup where you’re not attaching it to a laptop. Arzopa’s kickstand design on the Z1RC covers a reasonable range of angles, which matters for different seating positions across couch gaming, desk use, and travel scenarios.

500 nits brightness is the other specification worth calling out. Entry-level portable monitors at 200-300 nits are fine for indoor use in controlled lighting but wash out quickly in any environment with ambient light — hotel rooms with large windows, outdoor cafes, even an office with overhead fluorescents. 500 nits puts the Z1RC in a bracket where bright environments are usable, not just survivable. For anyone who uses a portable monitor in varied environments, that brightness headroom is the difference between a monitor you actually use and one that spends most trips in the bag.

The EDC angle here is carry compatibility. A 16-inch monitor is not a pocket item — you’re carrying it alongside your Switch 2 in a sling or daypack that has a dedicated sleeve or flat compartment. The Z1RC’s dimensions make it compatible with a wide range of bags that have a 13-inch laptop sleeve; the extra few inches fit in bags that have a padded flat section rather than a specifically sized sleeve. That compatibility matters for anyone who wants to integrate a portable monitor into an existing carry loadout without buying a dedicated bag for it.

At its price point, the Z1RC competes against a crowded field of portable monitors from brands like Lepow, Espresso, and InnoView. What Arzopa has done is push the resolution ceiling down to accessible price territory — 2.5K in this form factor previously required a significant premium. Whether that resolution upgrade is worth it over a 1080p alternative depends on your use case: for gaming and content consumption, yes. For productivity work, the extra clarity on text and UI elements is immediately noticeable. Big thanks to Excessorize Me for highlighting this one — the full video covers the display quality hands-on.

Closing Remarks

The Arzopa Z1RC makes a compelling case for adding a portable monitor to a Switch 2 carry setup — 2.5K resolution, solid brightness, and a kickstand that actually works in the field. If you’re looking to extend your Switch 2 gaming sessions into a proper screen experience without lugging a TV, the Z1RC is worth a serious look. What’s in your Nintendo Switch 2 travel setup? Drop it in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no extra cost to you.

tomtoc GameOn-G50 Handheld Gaming Console Sling Review

By Bags, Gaming, Video

Video Overview

Solid work from Pack Hacker Reviews on this two-weeks-of-use assessment of the tomtoc GameOn-G50 Handheld Gaming Console Sling. Pack Hacker brings their standard extended-use rigor to a bag that sits at an interesting intersection: a gaming-specific sling designed for handheld consoles like the Nintendo Switch 2, Steam Deck, and similar devices. The GameOn-G50 is tomtoc’s attempt to build a carry solution that serves both the gaming use case and everyday carry. This review covers external features, the harness system, fit, and the main compartment — everything you need to know before buying.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The tomtoc GameOn-G50 is the single subject of this review — a focused look at a bag designed explicitly for handheld gaming carry. At a category level, gaming slings occupy a growing niche: carry solutions that fit a console, accessories, cables, and daily essentials without looking like a dedicated gaming bag.

Editor’s Insight

The handheld gaming console sling is a new product category that didn’t really exist before the Steam Deck and Nintendo Switch made large handheld devices mainstream. Traditional backpacks are overkill for a gaming session away from home; hardshell cases protect the device but carry nothing else; standard slings lack the compartment sizing to fit a modern handheld console alongside its accessories. The tomtoc GameOn-G50 is positioned as the solution to that gap.

Tomtoc has been building tech carry accessories for several years, and their understanding of device-specific ergonomics shows in the G50. The main compartment is sized and padded to accommodate today’s largest handheld consoles — the Steam Deck OLED is the design reference point, which means it comfortably fits the Nintendo Switch 2, ROG Ally, and similar devices with room for a charging dock or battery pack alongside. That compartment sizing discipline is the key technical decision in the bag’s design: everything else — pocket layout, harness system, external access — is built around protecting and accessing the console.

The external features of the G50 reflect a hybrid approach. Gaming bags often make their use case obvious through branding, controller-shaped logos, or aggressive color schemes. The G50 takes a more neutral approach — exterior organization that serves daily carry, a harness system sized for commuting comfort, and a profile that reads as a general-purpose tech sling rather than a gaming-specific accessory. For carry-minded users who want their bag to work in professional contexts as well as gaming sessions, that restraint matters.

Pack Hacker’s harness assessment is particularly relevant for a sling at this size. Gaming consoles are heavier than they look — a Steam Deck with a case runs close to a kilogram — and a loaded G50 with console, charger, earbuds, and accessories approaches two kilograms. At that weight, sling strap width, padding, and the position of the load center all affect how long you can carry comfortably. A sling that works great for thirty minutes on a shoulder can become uncomfortable over a full commute or travel day.

The main compartment organization is where gaming-specific design earns its keep. A padded console sleeve protects the screen in transit — the most vulnerable surface on any handheld. Accessory pockets sized for Joy-Cons or grip controllers, cable management for charging cables, and a secure pocket for earbuds or a power bank round out what a gaming carry loadout needs. The G50’s approach here determines whether it’s genuinely useful as a gaming carry solution or just a branded sling that happens to fit a console.

The convergence of gaming and everyday carry is an interesting cultural moment worth noting. Handheld gaming has moved out of the “kid with a Game Boy” context and into adult daily carry in a significant way — the Steam Deck showed that adult gamers wanted a portable PC gaming device enough to carry it daily, and the Switch 2 has extended that trend into a mainstream audience. Bags like the GameOn-G50 are a direct product response to that shift: carry accessories designed for the adult daily carry market who also game. It’s a category that didn’t need to exist five years ago and is now filling shelf space across the carry accessory market.

For EDC users considering the G50: the key question is whether you want a dedicated gaming sling or a general-purpose sling that handles gaming. The GameOn-G50 positions itself as the former — built specifically around console carry, with everything else secondary. If your priority is a sling that fits any loadout and sometimes carries a console, a more general-purpose option might serve better. If you’re primarily carrying a gaming device and want the bag to optimize for that use case, the G50 makes a strong argument. Big thanks to Pack Hacker Reviews for the extended-use breakdown — watch the full video for the compartment details.

Closing Remarks

The tomtoc GameOn-G50 is a purpose-built carry solution for the growing handheld gaming audience — a sling designed around console carry without abandoning the everyday carry use case. Pack Hacker’s two-week review gives you an honest measure of how well it delivers on that promise. Do you carry a gaming console in your daily bag? Let us know your setup in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no extra cost to you.

Cotopaxi Allpa Mini 20L Travel Pack Review

By Bags, Travel, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Pack Hacker Reviews for this two-weeks-of-use breakdown of the Cotopaxi Allpa Mini 20L Travel Pack. Pack Hacker’s extended-use review format is one of the most honest in the travel gear space — two weeks of actual carry reveals things that a weekend test never would. The Allpa Mini is Cotopaxi’s compact take on their well-regarded Allpa series, bringing down the volume from the 35L flagship to a 20L form factor suited for weekend trips, personal-item airline carry, and daily commuting. If you’re considering the Cotopaxi Allpa Mini as a do-everything travel bag, this review will tell you whether it actually delivers.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Cotopaxi Allpa Mini 20L is the sole subject of this review — a deliberate choice that lets Pack Hacker assess every compartment, every strap, and every carry scenario in the depth it deserves. At 20 liters, this is a bag that promises personal-item sizing with organizational depth. Pack Hacker’s two-week assessment puts that promise to a real test.

Editor’s Insight

Cotopaxi has occupied an interesting position in the travel bag market: a brand that leads with sustainability and ethical production credentials, but has earned genuine carry community respect because the bags themselves are well-engineered. The Allpa series is their flagship, and the Mini represents a deliberate compression of that design DNA into a more portable form factor.

The 20L category is arguably the most competitive in the travel bag market right now. It sits squarely in personal-item territory for most airlines, which makes it appealing as a single-bag carry-on solution for short trips. But the challenge for any 20L bag is organizational depth — can you fit enough and access it efficiently enough to make single-bag travel genuinely workable, or does the smaller volume create constant compromise?

Pack Hacker’s external features section covers what matters before you pack anything: build quality, external access, and first impressions of the harness system. The Allpa series is known for its clamshell opening, which is one of the key reasons it has a loyal following. A true clamshell — one that opens 180 degrees or close to it — transforms packing and unpacking by letting you see and access everything at once rather than fishing through a top-load opening. Whether the Mini maintains that opening quality at 20L is one of the central questions the review answers.

The harness system assessment is particularly relevant for a 20L bag. At this volume, a full suspension system with load lifters and hip belt is typically overkill and adds unnecessary bulk. But a harness that’s too minimal leaves a loaded 20L digging into your back on a transit day with a laptop, clothes, and accessories packed inside. The balance point — structured enough to distribute weight, minimal enough to stay packable — is where most bags in this category succeed or fall short.

Secondary compartment organization is where Cotopaxi’s design philosophy shows most clearly. The Allpa series traditionally features front zip pockets with organizational panels, which is a practical choice for the travel use case — cables, adapters, a passport, a battery pack, and small accessories benefit from a dedicated organizational zone rather than getting buried in the main compartment. At 20L, the question is whether Cotopaxi has maintained that organizational depth or trimmed it to hit the smaller footprint.

The main compartment assessment — at nearly seven minutes in the video — is the heart of the review. This is where two-week testing pays off. Which laptop size fits? How does the internal organization handle different packing scenarios? Does the fabric hold up to repeated loading? Can you pack enough for a three-day trip without the bag losing its structure? These aren’t questions a weekend test can answer honestly.

Cotopaxi’s sustainability story is worth noting for EDC-minded buyers who factor manufacturing practices into purchase decisions. Cotopaxi uses repurposed fabric in their Allpa line, which is the reason for the distinctive color-block patterns — a design decision born from material constraints that became part of the brand’s visual identity. It’s one of the few cases where the ethical choice and the aesthetic choice converged rather than competing. Huge credit to Pack Hacker Reviews for the thorough two-week evaluation — watch the full video for the compartment-by-compartment breakdown.

Closing Remarks

The Cotopaxi Allpa Mini 20L is a serious contender in the personal-item travel bag segment, with Cotopaxi’s organizational philosophy compressed into a more portable form factor. Pack Hacker’s extended testing gives you an honest read on whether it delivers for real travel use. What’s your current travel pack, and have you tried the Allpa series? Let us know in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no additional cost to you.

Baton 4 Pro & Ultra Review – Almost Perfect Olight Flashlights

By Gadgets, Video

Video Overview

Thanks to Max LVL EDC for this in-depth look at two of Olight’s most popular compact flashlights: the Baton 4 Pro and Baton 4 Ultra. Max LVL EDC has built a reputation for honest, technically thorough gear assessments — he actually carries and uses what he reviews. The “almost perfect” framing in the title signals something unusual in the flashlight review space: a genuine acknowledgment of what’s slightly off alongside what works well. If you’re shopping the Baton 4 lineup or just want a grounded take on two of Olight’s current best pocket lights, this one is worth the runtime.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Baton 4 Pro and Baton 4 Ultra represent Olight’s current flagship compact carry segment — rechargeable, high-output pocket lights that sit between budget EDC options and full-size tactical flashlights. Both are purpose-built for daily carry, and the differences between them come down to output ceiling, runtime, and body construction.

Editor’s Insight

Olight has earned a polarizing reputation in the flashlight community. Enthusiasts on forums will tell you their emitters aren’t the most tint-accurate, their UI doesn’t match Anduril’s flexibility, and their closed ecosystem locks you into proprietary charging. All of that is true. And yet the Baton series consistently outsells its competition because Olight understands something many boutique flashlight makers don’t: most people want a light that’s good-enough across every dimension, not exceptional in one dimension and mediocre in others.

The Baton 4 Pro is the more restrained offering. It hits a sensible ceiling for everyday carry — enough lumens to illuminate a large room or light up a trail at distance, but output levels that don’t drain the battery in minutes. The form factor is the Baton series’ strongest argument: magnetic tail charging, smooth stainless steel or titanium body, and a clip that actually stays put on a pocket. These are details that matter after six months of daily carry in ways that peak lumen specs don’t.

The Baton 4 Ultra takes everything the Pro does and pushes the output ceiling considerably higher, which brings real trade-offs. Higher output means more heat, faster drain on top modes, and a body that needs more thermal mass to manage sustained use. For everyday carry where burst output matters more than sustained high-mode runtime, the Ultra makes sense. For extended use at high output, the Pro’s more measured approach is actually the better daily driver.

Max LVL EDC’s “almost perfect” characterization is interesting precisely because it resists the usual YouTube flashlight review format, which tends toward either unconditional enthusiasm or nitpick-driven negativity. “Almost perfect” suggests something specific: a light that gets the fundamentals right but has one or two meaningful gaps. That’s actually the most honest category for most production flashlights — they’re engineered compromises, and pretending otherwise doesn’t serve buyers.

For the EDC community specifically, the Baton 4 lineup’s magnetic charging is worth singling out. The charging contacts on the tail allow the light to sit on any magnetic surface while charging, which is unexpectedly useful on a desk or car console. It’s a small convenience detail, but it eliminates the “find the charging cable” step that makes many rechargeable lights slightly annoying in daily practice.

The clip quality on both variants deserves mention. Deep-carry clips on compact flashlights are one of those features that reviews consistently mention but rarely explain well. A good deep-carry clip means the light rides at the top of your pocket with just the clip visible — low profile, secure, and ready to grab without fishing into the pocket. Bad clips either loosen over time, leave the light riding too deep to grip quickly, or create so much drag that pocket access becomes a two-handed operation. Olight’s Baton clips historically land in the functional middle — not best-in-class, but consistently reliable.

If you’re deciding between the Pro and Ultra, the honest answer is that the Pro’s balanced output-to-runtime ratio makes it the better choice for 95% of everyday carry use cases. The Ultra’s appeal is situational — high-output burst mode for search, signaling, or illuminating large dark spaces. Unless you have a specific use case that demands the Ultra’s ceiling, the Pro is the more practical daily carry. Big thanks to Max LVL EDC for the hands-on breakdown — check the full video for his specific output measurements and side-by-side comparisons.

Closing Remarks

The Olight Baton 4 Pro and Ultra are strong contenders for the everyday carry flashlight spot, each with a distinct use case. If you want all-day reliability with sensible output levels, the Pro is your pick. If you want maximum burst output in a compact package, the Ultra earns it. What flashlight is currently riding your pocket? Drop it in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no extra cost to you.

No More Dead Joy-Cons – SUPCASE Charging Dock for Joy-Cons

By Gaming, Tech, Video

Video Overview

A quick but useful tip from Excessorize Me: if you’ve got a Nintendo Switch 2 household, dead Joy-Cons mid-session are a solved problem. This clip spotlights the SUPCASE Joy-Con Charging Dock — a dedicated charger designed to keep your controllers organized, topped up, and ready to go. SUPCASE is a brand known for protective accessories, and their charging dock brings that same practical-first thinking to power management for Switch 2 peripherals. Short, to the point, and relevant for anyone building out a clean Switch 2 setup.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The SUPCASE Joy-Con Charging Dock is the sole focus here — a purpose-built solution to one of the most common Switch 2 frustrations. With dual-side charging, multiple light modes to indicate charge status, and magnetic attachment for fast drop-in docking, it’s the kind of accessory that makes daily Switch 2 use noticeably smoother.

Editor’s Insight

Dead controllers are one of those friction points that sneaks up on you. You sit down for a session, pick up a Joy-Con, and it’s at 3%. The SUPCASE Charging Dock is a direct fix for that problem, and the way it addresses it is worth examining for EDC-minded folks who like their gear organized and ready at all times.

The dock charges multiple Joy-Cons simultaneously — a significant quality-of-life improvement over the console’s built-in charging solution, which requires Joy-Cons to be attached to the Switch itself. For households with multiple controllers, or for anyone who regularly detaches Joy-Cons to use as separate controllers during multiplayer, having a dedicated charging station means every controller is ready at the start of every session without any thought required.

SUPCASE’s dual-side charging design is the headline feature. Most Joy-Con docks on the market charge from one side only, which means you need to keep track of orientation. The dual-side approach removes that friction entirely — drop it in either way and it charges. That’s a small usability detail that matters when you’re in the middle of setting up a session and not paying close attention to accessory orientation.

The nine light modes for charge status indication is more useful than it sounds. A single LED or a simple full/charging binary gives you almost no information. Nine modes means you can tell at a glance whether a controller is at 10%, 50%, or fully charged without picking it up. That’s genuinely useful for planning gaming sessions and for managing multiple controllers across a family or gaming group.

The magnetic attachment for quick drop-in docking is the other detail worth noting. Magnetic docking removes the fiddly alignment problem that plagues traditional charging stands — you get close, the magnet guides the connector home, and you’re done. For everyday use, that tactile satisfaction of a guided dock connection beats a plug-it-in approach every time.

From an EDC perspective, the dock is part of a broader trend of “always-ready” peripheral management. The same mindset that keeps your flashlight charged, your power bank topped up, and your earbuds in the case extends naturally to gaming controllers. A dedicated dock makes the “charge the controllers” step invisible — they’re always docked when not in use, always charged when you pick them up.

SUPCASE as a brand has earned solid credibility in the Switch accessory space, primarily through their Unicorn Beetle cases. Moving into charging hardware is a natural extension, and based on the dock’s feature set — dual-side charging, magnetic docking, multi-mode indicators — they’ve brought the same specification attention to the charging category. Worth checking out the full Excessorize Me video for a hands-on look at the dock in action. Big thanks to Excessorize Me for the concise rundown.

Closing Remarks

The SUPCASE Joy-Con Charging Dock is a simple, targeted fix for a common Switch 2 frustration. If you’re building out a clean Nintendo Switch 2 setup and want to keep your controllers perpetually ready, this dock deserves a spot on your desk. What’s in your Switch 2 accessory setup? Let us know in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no extra cost to you.

The Ridge Power Bank (10k mAh) Review

By Gadgets, Tech, Video

Video Overview

Many thanks to Pack Hacker Reviews for this two-weeks-of-use look at The Ridge Power Bank in its 10,000 mAh configuration. Pack Hacker has built one of the most thorough gear-testing approaches in the travel and EDC space — they actually use products for extended periods before drawing conclusions, which means their assessments carry real weight. This review covers functionality, packability, and a quick comparison against competing power banks, giving you a grounded sense of how The Ridge’s take on portable charging holds up in practice.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Ridge Power Bank 10k mAh is the sole focus of this review — a deliberate, singular choice from Pack Hacker that allows them to spend the full runtime on real-world testing rather than surface-level comparisons. The result is an unusually honest look at what The Ridge brings to an already crowded power bank market.

Editor’s Insight

The Ridge built its reputation on wallets — specifically, the minimalist aluminum cardholder that became a defining EDC product of the 2010s. Moving into power banks is a natural extension of that brand identity: clean industrial design, premium materials, and a price point that sits above commodity options. The question is whether the execution matches the aesthetic.

At 10,000 mAh, The Ridge Power Bank sits in the sweet spot for daily carry. It’s large enough to fully charge most modern smartphones twice over — critical for long travel days or multi-day trips where access to wall outlets is unpredictable — but small enough to fit in a jacket pocket or the top compartment of a sling without dominating the load-out. This is the capacity category where most EDC-minded users actually land: 20,000 mAh banks are for camping trips, 5,000 mAh is for a single emergency top-up. The 10k range is the everyday carry sweet spot.

Pack Hacker’s two-week use period is meaningful here. Power banks have a well-documented reputation for failing quietly — the charging circuit degrades, the stated capacity diverges from actual output, or the build quality reveals itself through daily handling. Reviewing a power bank after a weekend tells you very little. Two weeks of actual use, including repeated charge cycles and real-world charge times, tells you whether the product holds up to its marketing claims.

The Ridge’s design language translates interestingly to a power bank. Their wallets are all about precision machining and minimal visual noise, and you can see those priorities in the power bank’s form factor — fewer ports than most competitors, clean lines, and a build quality that doesn’t feel like a compromised off-brand unit with a premium sticker. The question Pack Hacker is really answering is whether that restraint costs you functionality, or whether the focused design actually serves daily carry better than spec-maxed alternatives.

Pack Hacker’s packability section is worth paying close attention to. A power bank isn’t just a charging device — it’s something you carry, which means dimensions, weight distribution, and surface texture all affect the experience. Smooth aluminum surfaces can be slippery in a bag pocket; heavy units shift carry balance; sharp edges create wear on adjacent items. These aren’t spec-sheet considerations, and the two-week format lets Pack Hacker address them credibly.

The quick comparison section in the video is where the competitive positioning becomes clear. The Ridge isn’t trying to beat Anker on price-per-mAh — that battle is already lost before it starts. They’re competing in the premium segment alongside brands like Zendure and Shargeek: power banks where design, materials, and brand identity justify a premium over raw specs. Whether that premium is worth it depends entirely on how much weight you put on aesthetics and brand association versus pure utility.

For the EDC community specifically, The Ridge Power Bank makes sense as a carry piece if you already own their wallet and appreciate the visual consistency of a matched set. If you’re agnostic about brand aesthetics, the value proposition becomes harder to defend against Anker’s PowerCore lineup at similar capacities and lower prices. But then again, the same argument applies to most premium EDC gear — you’re often paying for the experience of carrying a well-made object, not just its function.

Pack Hacker’s approach here — honest, time-tested, comparison-grounded — is the kind of review that EDC buyers actually need before committing to a premium product. Credit to Pack Hacker Reviews for doing the actual work. Watch the full video for their hands-on comparison against competing power banks.

Closing Remarks

The Ridge Power Bank is a considered choice for EDC users who value design consistency alongside function. If you’re building a clean, minimal carry and already own Ridge accessories, the 10k mAh version is a natural fit. For pure charging value, the competition is fierce at this capacity level — but Pack Hacker’s two-week testing gives you an honest baseline for the decision. What power bank are you currently carrying? Let us know in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no additional cost to you.

13 Must-Have Japanese EDC Essentials

By Bags, Fashion, Gadgets, Tech, Tools, Video

Video Overview

A genuine thank you to HICONSUMPTION for this deep-dive into Japanese everyday carry. Japan has quietly become a gold standard for EDC gear — the country’s craft tradition, obsessive attention to detail, and commitment to functional design have produced some of the most coveted pieces in the carry community. In this video, HICONSUMPTION gets hands-on with 13 Japanese-made essentials, from a century-old folding knife design to premium leather goods and iconic hip bags. If you’ve been curious about building a more intentional, craft-forward EDC loadout, this is essential viewing.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

Three items stand out from this lineup. The Higonokami Folding Knife is a piece of living history — its split-spring design dates back over a century and is still made by hand in Miki City. The Porter Tanker Hip Bag is arguably the most recognized Japanese EDC bag globally, beloved for its military-inspired aesthetic and buttery nylon. And the Fujifilm X-E5 brings Japan’s optics legacy into compact street-photography form.

Editor’s Insight

There’s a specific kind of carry philosophy embedded in Japanese design that doesn’t get articulated enough in the Western EDC conversation. It’s not just about quality — it’s about the relationship between maker and user, and the idea that a well-made object should develop character over time rather than wear out and be replaced. That ethos runs through nearly every item in this lineup.

Start with the Higonokami Folding Knife. At roughly thirty dollars, it’s the most approachable item in the roundup, but it carries more craft heritage than most knives at ten times the price. The blue paper steel blade requires actual maintenance — it will rust if you ignore it — but that’s the point. It demands engagement. The split-spring construction, which has been essentially unchanged since the Meiji era, is elegant in its simplicity. You open it with your thumbnail against the spine, not a flipper or a thumb stud. Using one feels deliberate in a way that modern assisted-open knives simply don’t.

The Porter Tanker Hip Bag operates in a completely different register. It’s a premium item — $291 is not impulse-buy territory — but it’s earned its status. Yoshida Kaban, the company behind Porter, has been making bags in Japan since 1935. The Tanker line, inspired by military flight suit materials, has been in continuous production for decades. The ripstop nylon, the YKK zippers, the hardware — every element is sourced and manufactured at a standard that makes most Western “premium” bags look like approximations. If you’re going to spend that kind of money on a hip bag, the Tanker is one of the few that justifies it.

The Fujifilm X-E5 rounds out the three standouts and represents something different again: Japan’s dominance in optical engineering. Fujifilm’s X-series sensors and lenses have attracted a loyal following among street photographers specifically because the files they produce have a character that digital-native camera systems often lack. The X-E5 in particular is compact enough to carry daily without feeling like you’re hauling camera gear. It’s the rare piece of tech that also functions as an object of appreciation.

Some items in this roundup — the Tsuchiya Diario wallet, the Tetzbo brass pen, the Candy Design & Works Kendric Keyholder — sit in a category that EDC collectors know well: Japanese artisan goods that aren’t widely distributed outside Japan. These pieces develop a patina, a personality, over years of daily carry. The brass pen tarnishes to a deep brown. The leather wallet creases and forms to your pocket. The keyholder develops a worn finish that catalog photos will never capture. That aging process is the point.

The Penco Coil Notepad and Tiger water bottle represent the other end of the Japanese design spectrum: functional, everyday goods done with quiet precision. The Penco notepad has been a cult object in the stationery world for years — it opens flat, the paper takes ink well, and the coil binding doesn’t distort. The Tiger MJF-A water bottle is pure function, keeping liquids hot or cold longer than most Western alternatives without the brand-forward aesthetic that dominates insulated bottle marketing in the US.

If there’s a theme connecting all 13 items, it’s restraint. Japanese design at its best doesn’t announce itself. The Higonokami doesn’t have a blade steel spec sheet on the box. The Porter bag doesn’t have a logo plastered across it. The Kuoe watch doesn’t try to look like anything other than a simple, honest timepiece. That restraint is increasingly rare in the EDC market, where gear has trended toward specification maximalism and brand performance. These pieces push back against that current.

For anyone looking to introduce Japanese EDC into their carry, the Higonokami is the obvious entry point — the cost is low, the quality is undeniable, and it introduces the maintenance mindset that makes the rest of this category make sense. From there, the Porter Tanker or the Penco notepad are natural next steps depending on whether you’re drawn to carry or craft. A big thanks to HICONSUMPTION for handling every item in person — watch the full video for the hands-on context these pieces deserve.

Closing Remarks

Japanese EDC is a world unto itself — one where craft tradition, functional design, and an almost philosophical approach to daily objects converge. Whether you’re drawn to the Higonokami’s century-old simplicity or the Porter Tanker’s premium nylon carry, there’s something in this lineup worth adding to your rotation. What Japanese EDC pieces are already in your carry? Share in the comments. Affiliate links support the site at no additional cost to you.

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