Pack Hacker released both a quick look and a full two-week review of the Aer City Pack Pro 2 20L — and both are worth watching for different reasons. This quick look gives you Pack Hacker’s immediate first impressions: how the bag presents in person, initial assessment of material quality, and a tour of the organization before extended use has had time to reveal the nuances. For anyone making a near-term purchase decision, this is the faster-moving data point. The full review (also published this week) gives you the extended use perspective.
Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video
- Aer City Pack Pro 2 20L – Purchase on Amazon
The Aer City Pack Pro 2 20L is Aer’s current-generation answer to the premium commuter pack category. Built from Cordura nylon with YKK zippers and Aer’s signature organization system, the City Pack Pro 2 targets the professional who needs a bag that works equally well for daily commuting and weekend travel. The 20L capacity is intentionally constrained — forcing disciplined packing while remaining within overhead bin requirements on most carriers.
Editor’s Insight
Quick look videos serve a specific purpose in the gear review ecosystem: they give you the reviewer’s unfiltered first impression before extended use has the chance to soften or sharpen opinions. Pack Hacker’s quick looks are particularly useful because they approach the product with a framework built from reviewing hundreds of bags — so even first impressions are contextualized against a wide comparative reference.
Aer’s City Pack Pro 2 is arriving at a moment when the premium commuter pack market has never been more competitive. Peak Design, Bellroy, Moment, and numerous smaller brands are all fighting for the same customer: a professional who takes gear seriously and wants a bag that reflects that. Aer’s position in this competitive field is based on their consistent execution across several years and multiple product iterations.
The “Pro 2” designation matters for existing Aer customers. The original City Pack and the City Pack Pro have both accumulated significant review coverage. Understanding what the Pro 2 changes — whether it’s strap geometry, pocket organization, material updates, or hardware choices — is information that helps existing Aer users decide whether an upgrade is warranted.
Pack Hacker’s quick look format typically covers: first impressions of materials and construction, a systematic tour of every pocket and organizational feature, a quick assessment of carry ergonomics (harness fit, strap padding, weight distribution), and a preliminary positioning against comparable bags in their review library. This is enough information to make a preliminary purchase decision.
For the Aer City Pack Pro 2 specifically, the quick look and full review together give you a complete picture: immediate material and design impressions plus extended use performance data. Publishing both within the same week (as Pack Hacker has done here) is useful for buyers who want all available information before ordering. The full two-week review is the more authoritative assessment, but the quick look adds the first-impression data point.
Twenty liters is Aer’s choice for a specific customer who carries a curated, disciplined kit. If you regularly find yourself packing everything at the last minute and relying on bag volume to accommodate the excess, the 20L will feel constraining. But if you’ve already developed good packing habits — knowing exactly what you need for a given type of day — the 20L becomes a feature rather than a limitation. Pack Hacker’s review will tell you which type of user this bag best serves.
The combination of the quick look and two-week review makes this week’s Pack Hacker coverage of the Aer City Pack Pro 2 one of the more comprehensive single-bag assessments available from any reviewer. Between both videos and the comparison video with the 24L variant, you have all the information needed to make a confident decision. Check out their full channel for all three videos.
Closing Remarks
Pack Hacker’s quick look gives you Aer City Pack Pro 2’s first-impression story — the materials, the organization, and the initial carry experience before extended use has time to reveal more. If you’re evaluating this pack, pair this quick look with their full review for the complete picture. Interested in the Aer City Pack Pro 2? Tell us what you think in the comments. Affiliate links above support this blog at no extra cost to you.







