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Aer City Pack Pro 2 20L Quick Look – Pack Hacker First Impressions

By Bags, Video

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

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.

YETI Skala 40L Backpack Review – Pack Hacker (2 Weeks of Use)

By Bags, Travel, Video

YETI built their reputation on coolers and drinkware — products engineered for extreme durability in outdoor environments. Their entry into the backpack category with the Skala 40L applies that same durability-first philosophy to carry gear, but at 40 liters it’s targeting a very different use case than YETI’s heritage: a large-capacity technical pack for travel and adventure. Pack Hacker’s two-week review evaluates whether YETI’s outdoor brand DNA translates effectively to the travel backpack category.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The YETI Skala 40L is a large-format backpack built with YETI’s characteristic emphasis on durability and weather resistance. At 40 liters, it’s sized for extended travel or adventure use — larger than a typical carry-on-optimized pack, but still manageable for one-bag travelers with aggressive packing skills. YETI brings their outdoor heritage to the organizational design, materials selection, and hardware choices throughout the bag.

Editor’s Insight

YETI’s expansion into backpacks is fascinating from a brand strategy perspective. They’ve built extraordinary brand loyalty around products where their engineering is genuinely superior: a YETI cooler keeps ice longer than competitors, and the premium is justified by tangible performance. The question for their backpack line is whether that same engineering discipline applies to soft goods in a way that creates real differentiation from established pack brands.

Forty liters is a significant capacity commitment. For reference, most overhead-bin-compatible carry-on bags top out around 40-45 liters, and many strict one-bag travelers prefer the 26-35L range. The Skala 40L is positioned for travelers who prioritize capacity and aren’t willing to check a bag — or who need the volume for adventure gear that doesn’t compress well (technical layers, hiking gear, camera equipment).

YETI’s materials approach will be the most interesting aspect of this review. Their drinkware and coolers use stainless steel and roto-molded plastic engineered for decades of use. In a backpack, that durability philosophy translates to fabric choice, zipper selection, and hardware construction. If YETI has applied genuine engineering rigor to these choices rather than just branding existing materials with their logo, the Skala 40L should outlast typical travel packs significantly.

The weather resistance question is particularly relevant for a YETI product. Their coolers and drinkware are designed to perform in outdoor environments. Whether the Skala 40L brings meaningful weather resistance to the travel pack category — through fabric treatment, construction technique, or zipper design — is something Pack Hacker’s testing will assess directly through their packability and weather resistance evaluations.

Pack Hacker’s two-week review of a 40L pack should cover several specific scenarios: how the bag carries when fully loaded (shoulder and hip belt comfort with substantial weight), how accessible the organization is when the bag is standing upright versus worn, and how the laptop compartment (if present) performs for protection and quick access. These are the use cases that determine whether a large-format pack is actually livable for daily travel use.

YETI’s price point in the backpack category reflects their premium brand positioning — expect pricing comparable to or above established premium pack brands like Osprey, Arc’teryx, or Aer. Whether that premium is justified by actual performance or driven primarily by brand equity is exactly what Pack Hacker’s methodology is designed to assess. The two-week test removes the new-gear excitement from the evaluation.

For travelers who trust YETI’s outdoor gear with their gear on expeditions, the Skala 40L is a natural extension of that trust to travel carry. For travelers coming from established pack brands who are evaluating YETI’s first serious entry into their category, Pack Hacker’s review provides an impartial comparative assessment. Either way, the full review on their channel is worth watching before making a decision at this price point.

Closing Remarks

YETI enters the premium travel backpack space with the Skala 40L, bringing their outdoor engineering philosophy to soft carry goods. Pack Hacker’s two-week review tests whether that philosophy delivers in the travel context. If you’re looking for a large-format, durability-first travel pack, the Skala 40L is worth evaluating. What large-format pack are you using? Let us know in the comments. Affiliate links above support this blog at no extra cost to you.

Bellroy Transit Sling 5L Review – Pack Hacker (2 Weeks of Use)

By Bags, Travel, Video

Bellroy’s Transit line extends from full-size checked luggage all the way down to compact sling carry — and the Transit Sling 5L is their entry in the small-format sling category. Pack Hacker’s two-week review gives this bag the same rigorous treatment they apply to backpacks and larger carry: real-world use across different contexts, assessment of organization and access, and a comparative read against competitors at the same size and price point. Bellroy is a known quantity in the premium carry space, which makes this review a useful data point for anyone already invested in their product ecosystem.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Bellroy Transit Sling 5L is a compact sling designed for daily essentials carry. At 5 liters, it’s substantially larger than micro slings (like the 2.5L Toshi reviewed elsewhere this week) but still firmly in the compact category — this is a sling for someone who needs phone, wallet, keys, a small water bottle, earbuds, and maybe a light layer, without the commitment of a full daypack.

Editor’s Insight

Bellroy has a clear design language that carries across their entire product line: premium materials, thoughtful organization, clean aesthetics that work in professional and casual contexts. The Transit Sling 5L needs to deliver all three of these while also working as a sling — which adds the mechanical challenges of strap design and wear ergonomics on top of the organizational design challenge.

Five liters is a meaningful sling size. It’s enough to genuinely carry for a day out without feeling underprepared, but not so large that it becomes cumbersome to wear across the shoulder for extended periods. The 5L category is where slings start to feel like legitimate bag replacements rather than just accessory carry. The organization design at this size determines whether those 5 liters are usable space or frustrating dead volume.

Bellroy’s Transit naming is deliberate — these bags are designed for movement through transit systems, cities, and travel environments. The sling form factor is particularly well-suited to transit use: you can swing it to the front without taking it off, keeping your belongings visible and accessible in crowded spaces where a backpack becomes a liability. This is the core ergonomic advantage of the sling format.

Pack Hacker’s extended review will assess whether Bellroy’s organization choices — pocket placement, quick-access compartments, strap adjustment mechanism — work as intended over extended real-world use. First-impression reviews often miss the friction points that only emerge after weeks of daily carry: a zipper that’s positioned awkwardly when the bag is on your shoulder, a pocket that’s slightly too small for your specific phone case, or a strap buckle that loosens during wear.

The materials on Bellroy’s Transit line use their Premium Weave fabric, which balances a clean, non-technical aesthetic with meaningful weather resistance and durability. For a sling that’s worn in transit environments — where bags get set on subway benches and restaurant tables, exposed to light rain, and repeatedly opened and closed — fabric durability matters as much as initial appearance.

At 5L, the Bellroy Transit Sling competes with options from Aer (their Sling 2), Peak Design (the Sling 5L), and Moment (their Sling). Each of these has a slightly different organizational philosophy and aesthetic. Bellroy’s comparative strengths are typically their finishing quality and the internal organization structure — both factors that Pack Hacker’s methodology is well-positioned to evaluate. Their full review with comparative notes is worth watching on their channel.

For anyone building a coordinated Bellroy carry system — Transit bag, Transit Sling, and Transit Wallet — the sling is the versatile daily carry complement that handles non-laptop days without requiring you to pull out the full bag. This kind of system thinking is exactly what Bellroy’s Transit line is designed around, and Pack Hacker’s review tests whether the execution matches the intent.

Closing Remarks

The Bellroy Transit Sling 5L delivers the brand’s signature design quality in a compact, versatile sling format. Pack Hacker’s two-week review gives you the extended use perspective to evaluate it properly. If a daily sling upgrade is on your radar, this is a strong contender. What sling setup are you running? Drop it in the comments. Affiliate links above support this blog at no extra cost to you.

Pacsafe EXP 28L Anti-Theft Backpack Review (2 Weeks of Use)

By Bags, Travel, Video

Video Overview

Huge thanks to Pack Hacker Reviews for this in-depth look. Pack Hacker is one of the most rigorous travel gear review channels on YouTube — they test products over real durations in real conditions, which is exactly what they did here with the Pacsafe EXP 28L. Two full weeks of use before filming means this isn’t an unboxing reaction: it’s an actual assessment. The Pacsafe EXP 28L is a 28-liter anti-theft travel backpack that’s been in production long enough to have a community of loyal users, and Pack Hacker’s review covers every feature and limitation in structured, chapter-by-chapter detail.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Pacsafe EXP 28L is the sole focus of this review — a 28-liter travel backpack built around anti-theft construction including slash-resistant panels, lockable zippers, and RFID-blocking pockets. Pack Hacker walks through every compartment and feature in detail, making this one of the most complete assessments of this bag available anywhere.

Editor’s Insight

Anti-theft bags occupy a specific niche in the travel gear world: people who travel to high-pickpocket environments and want structural protection rather than just behavioral awareness. Pacsafe has owned this niche for years, and the EXP 28L is their flagship backpack offering built around that core philosophy.

The anti-theft engineering on the EXP 28L is the most aggressive you’ll find in a carry-on-compatible bag. The outer shell incorporates slash-resistant panels made from a metal mesh layer bonded inside the fabric — this is what separates Pacsafe from bags that simply claim to be “cut-resistant.” The zippers are all lockable, compatible with a small TSA-approved lock or Pacsafe’s own locking system. The shoulder straps include attachment points that can be locked to fixed objects, which is useful in hostels or café situations where you want to step away from your bag briefly without leaving it completely unattended.

Pack Hacker’s review covers the external features thoroughly. The front pocket is generous and well-organized, the side water bottle pockets are accessible on both sides, and the exterior compression straps serve double duty as both a compression mechanism and anchor points. The 28-liter volume is the right size for a travel day bag or a short-haul personal item, though it’s borderline for anything over 2-3 days of carry.

The harness system is where the video gets interesting. Pack Hacker notes that the shoulder straps are comfortable for medium carry loads but start to show limitations when heavily loaded — the foam density and back panel padding are optimized for city day use rather than extended all-day walking with a full pack. If your primary use case is museum days and transit, it performs well. For 8-hour hiking days with a heavy load, you’ll want more structure.

Fit notes are worth paying attention to if you’re on the smaller end of the size spectrum. The back panel length is fixed, so shorter torsos may find the carry ratio isn’t ideal. Pack Hacker addresses this explicitly in their review — worth watching the harness section carefully if this applies to you.

The interior organization is practical without being excessive. The main compartment is a clean clamshell opening that works well for packing cubes, and the secondary compartments cover the needs of most travelers: a quick-access pocket, a document compartment with RFID-blocking fabric, and a hydration-compatible main compartment. Pacsafe doesn’t include a reservoir, but the slot is there if you bring your own.

At its price point, the EXP 28L competes primarily against other anti-theft bags like the Travelon Anti-Theft bag family and Bobby by XD Design. The Pacsafe wins on structural protection but gives up some weight and flexibility. If security is your primary concern, the engineering difference is meaningful. If you’re mostly worried about casual zippered pocket theft rather than coordinated attacks, a lighter bag with a lockable zipper will serve you just as well at lower cost.

Pack Hacker Reviews consistently delivers the kind of structured, timed testing that the travel gear space badly needs. Their commitment to using products before filming is a standard more reviewers should follow. Go subscribe and check their full catalog of travel bag reviews — it’s one of the most complete libraries on YouTube.

Closing Remarks

The Pacsafe EXP 28L is purpose-built for travelers who operate in high-theft environments and want structural protection, not just behavioral awareness. If that’s your use case, it’s one of the best options at this size. What anti-theft measures do you build into your travel carry? Drop a comment below — we’d love to hear how the community handles this. Affiliate links above support the blog at no cost to you.

Very Good Budget Multitool from an Unexpected Place – Klarus MT07 Review

By Gadgets, Tools, Video

Video Overview

Big thanks to Max LVL EDC for this one. If you’re looking for a capable multitool without breaking the bank, Max LVL EDC has become one of the most reliable voices in the space for budget gear that actually performs. In this video, they dive into the Klarus MT07 — a multitool from Klarus, a brand better known for flashlights than hand tools. Spoiler: the MT07 is a genuine surprise, and the video makes a compelling case for why Klarus deserves a second look from the EDC community.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Klarus MT07 is the clear star of this video — a full-function stainless steel multitool that punches well above its price class. Max LVL EDC also references the Bibury Multitool Pliers as a comparison point for value shoppers. Both tools land in the budget tier, but the MT07 edges ahead on build quality and tool precision.

Editor’s Insight

The budget multitool market is crowded, and most of the noise comes from brands nobody’s heard of selling stainless steel plier tools that feel cheap the moment you unfold them. Klarus is different, and that’s exactly what makes the MT07 interesting.

Klarus built their reputation in the flashlight world — tools like the Mi7 and XT11GT earned them serious credibility with people who care about build quality and engineering precision. That same attention to tolerance and material selection carries over to the MT07. The pliers open and close smoothly, the locking mechanism on the main tools is positive and reliable, and the fit-and-finish is noticeably cleaner than most tools in this price range.

The tool selection on the MT07 covers the bases well: full-size pliers, wire cutters, three screwdriver tips, a wood saw, a file, a bottle opener, and a blade. It’s not trying to be a Leatherman Wave or a Victorinox Spirit — it’s a focused, no-frills loadout that works for the situations most people actually encounter. Tightening a loose screw, opening a bottle, cutting a zip tie: the MT07 handles all of it without issue.

What Max LVL EDC makes clear in the video is that Klarus clearly put real engineering into this rather than just rebranding a generic tool. The pliers have a realistic pivot tolerance, the screwdriver tips actually fit standard hardware, and the blade holds an edge better than you’d expect at this price point. These might sound like low bars, but you’d be surprised how many budget multitools fail basic tests like these.

The MT07 is a solid recommendation for anyone who wants to keep a multitool in a laptop bag, glovebox, or travel kit without spending Leatherman money. It’s also a great starter tool for people new to EDC who want to experiment with carrying a multitool before committing to a premium option.

For the budget-conscious EDC person, Max LVL EDC’s budget multitool master list is worth bookmarking — it covers a wide range of options across different price points and tool counts. One of the most useful resources in the community for this specific category.

The Bibury Multitool Pliers appear as an alternative in this space — marketed toward camping and hiking use cases with a rope cutter and a more aggressive tool layout. It’s a product that won’t feel premium, but the price-to-function ratio is hard to argue with if your use case is specifically outdoor tasks rather than everyday carry.

One thing worth noting: Klarus doesn’t have the multitool track record that Leatherman or Victorinox do, and the MT07 hasn’t been in enough hands long enough to have a long-term durability reputation. It’s a strong first impression, but the five-year verdict is still pending. For a budget purchase, that’s an acceptable risk — especially given the strong engineering pedigree Klarus brings from their flashlight line.

Max LVL EDC continues to be one of the best resources on YouTube for EDC gear in the mid-to-budget range. Subscribe to their channel and check their full catalog — they go deep on tools that most reviewers skip entirely.

Closing Remarks

The Klarus MT07 is a legitimate budget multitool from a brand that knows how to build things properly. If you’ve been looking for a capable everyday tool without spending $80+, this is one of the strongest options at this price point right now. Tell us in the comments — what multitool is in your daily rotation? Affiliate links above help keep this blog running at no extra cost to you.

CARRYX Personal Duffel 27L Review – Pack Hacker (2 Weeks of Use)

By Bags, Travel, Video

Duffel bags occupy a specific space in the travel carry ecosystem — they’re not as organized as a backpack, not as polished as hard-shell luggage, but they offer a combination of flexibility, capacity, and carry options that neither alternative provides. Pack Hacker’s two-week review of the CARRYX Personal Duffel 27L evaluates a newer entrant in this space: a brand positioning themselves in the premium duffel category with a focus on versatility and organization that traditional duffels lack.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The CARRYX Personal Duffel 27L is a flexible duffel designed for travelers who want duffel-style carry in a more organized package. At 27 liters, it sits in personal item territory — large enough for a genuine weekend’s worth of gear, small enough to fit under an airplane seat when needed. CARRYX appears to be addressing the traditional duffel’s main weakness: the lack of structure and organization that makes packing and accessing gear frustrating.

Editor’s Insight

The 27-liter duffel is a versatile capacity for a specific traveler profile: the person who travels light but wants flexibility in how they carry. A duffel at this size works as a gym bag, a weekend bag, a personal item on flights, and a day bag for trips where you’ve checked a larger piece of luggage. That versatility is the duffel’s core value proposition.

CARRYX as a brand name implies carry-focused design thinking — a brand built around the carry experience rather than just the product. Whether this translates to meaningful design innovation or just good marketing copy is what Pack Hacker’s two-week review will establish. The “personal duffel” positioning suggests they’re targeting the airline personal item market specifically, which has very specific dimensional requirements and carry comfort demands.

Traditional duffels fail at organization in a predictable way: one large cavity plus maybe one small exterior pocket. Everything goes in the main cavity, and finding what you’re looking for means digging through the contents. Premium duffels address this with interior organization panels, shoe compartments, quick-access pockets positioned for how you actually use the bag in transit, and structured bases that keep the bag upright when set down.

Pack Hacker’s methodology is particularly valuable for a category like duffels because packability is a key variable. A duffel that doesn’t compress well when empty is a duffel you’ll leave at home on trips where you’re traveling light. The best duffels fold or roll into themselves — their own exterior pocket, typically — making them genuinely packable in a way that rigid luggage isn’t.

At 27 liters, the CARRYX sits in a sweet spot for weekend travelers who are committed to carry-on only travel. It’s at the upper limit of what most airlines accept as a personal item (under-seat), which means you can potentially avoid the overhead bin entirely. For frequent flyers who’ve mastered the art of one-bag carry, a well-organized 27L duffel can replace a rolling carry-on for trips up to four or five days.

The materials and construction quality will determine whether this is a duffel you’re still using in five years or one that needs replacement within two. Pack Hacker pays close attention to zipper quality (YKK is the standard benchmark), hardware durability, and fabric abrasion resistance — all factors that matter significantly for a bag that’s handled roughly in transit.

For EDC enthusiasts who’ve optimized their daily carry but haven’t applied the same thinking to their travel carry, the CARRYX Personal Duffel 27L is worth evaluating. The same principles that make a good EDC bag apply at the travel scale: organized access, durable materials, and a size that matches your actual needs rather than your aspirational packing. Check out Pack Hacker’s full review for the complete performance assessment.

Closing Remarks

CARRYX enters the premium duffel space with a product positioned for organized, flexible travel carry. Pack Hacker’s two-week review will tell you whether they’ve delivered on that promise. If a versatile travel duffel is on your list, this review is worth your time. What’s your go-to travel bag? Share in the comments. Affiliate links above support this blog at no extra cost to you.

I Finally Found the Perfect Backpack – Peak Design Outdoor Backpack 18L

By Bags, Travel, Video

Video Overview

A huge thank you to the team at EXCESSORIZE ME. for putting this one together. This clip comes from their main channel’s deep-dive into the top summer gadgets you didn’t know you needed — and the Peak Design Outdoor Backpack 18L is the standout pick. Peak Design has spent years building a reputation for camera-carry gear that’s equal parts beautiful and bulletproof, but the Outdoor Backpack 18L marks their move into everyday carry territory. This is a bag designed for people who refuse to compromise between trail performance and urban style. In a short clip, they nail exactly what makes this pack worth a second look.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Peak Design Outdoor Backpack 18L is the featured pack in this clip — a weather-resistant, intelligently organized 18-liter daypack built for hybrid trail-and-city use. Peak Design brings the same precision engineering from their camera bags to this outdoor-oriented carry, and the result is one of the more compelling daypacks at this volume.

Editor’s Insight

Peak Design entered the outdoor daypack market with a clear mission: build something that doesn’t force you to choose between rugged durability and everyday usability. The Outdoor Backpack 18L is the result, and it’s one of the most thoughtfully designed daypacks available at any price point.

The bag is constructed from a custom recycled ripstop nylon that Peak Design developed specifically for this line. It resists abrasion, sheds water, and still manages to feel lighter than you’d expect from a panel with this kind of durability. The 18-liter volume is the sweet spot for a full day out — large enough to carry a rain layer, lunch, and your full EDC kit, compact enough to not feel like you’re hauling luggage through the city.

Organization inside the pack follows the same logic as every Peak Design product: flexible dividers, magnetic closures, and a main compartment that stays genuinely accessible rather than acting like a stuff sack you have to unpack entirely to find anything. The side access zipper — a feature lifted from their camera bags — is one of the most underrated design details on any pack this size. You can reach into the main compartment from the side without setting the bag down, which is the kind of thing that sounds minor until you’ve lived with bags that don’t have it.

The harness system punches above the 18L weight class. Dual-density foam shoulder straps and a lightly padded back panel keep the load comfortable through a full day of movement. It doesn’t have the adjustable torso length you’d find on a true backpacking rig, but for day trips and urban use, the fit is excellent across a wide range of body types.

What makes this particularly interesting in the EDC space is that Peak Design was explicit about wanting it to work both on trail and in the office. The laptop sleeve — fits up to 16″ — and internal organization are laid out for a professional carry, while the external lash points and weatherproofing handle weekend adventures without complaint. Most “hybrid” bags feel like compromises. This one actually manages to serve both contexts without feeling designed by committee.

The colorways are muted and neutral by design. Sage, Black, and Bone are the three options, and all three work in environments where a loud tactical-patterned pack would stand out. This is intentional — Peak Design knows their audience prefers gear that works quietly.

At its price point, this competes with the likes of the Fjällräven Kanken and Cotopaxi Allpa, but the internal organization and material quality push it ahead of both. If you already carry a Peak Design wallet, camera clip, or everyday bag, the Outdoor Backpack 18L fits naturally into that ecosystem.

A huge credit goes to EXCESSORIZE ME. for consistently surfacing gear that blends EDC sensibility with real-world durability. Their summer gadget roundups are required viewing — go subscribe and watch the full video for the rest of their top picks this season.

Closing Remarks

The Peak Design Outdoor Backpack 18L is a rare daypack that handles trail conditions and city carry equally well. If you’ve been searching for a bag that doesn’t require you to own two separate packs, this is the one to look at seriously. Drop a comment below — what’s your daily driver bag? We love seeing what the EDC community is carrying. As always, affiliate links above support the blog at no cost to you.

Aer City Pack Pro 2 20L Review – Pack Hacker (2 Weeks of Use)

By Bags, Travel, Video

Pack Hacker’s full two-week review of the Aer City Pack Pro 2 20L delivers what the quick look (also published this week) couldn’t: extended real-world performance data. Aer is one of the most consistently praised brands in the premium backpack space, and the City Pack Pro 2 represents their current-generation answer to the commuter-travel crossover category. Two weeks of daily use gives Pack Hacker enough context to report on comfort across extended carry sessions, how the organization holds up to a real workflow, and whether the materials live up to their premium positioning.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The Aer City Pack Pro 2 20L is a premium commuter and light travel backpack built around Cordura nylon, YKK zippers, and Aer’s signature organizational philosophy. The 20L capacity sits in the commuter sweet spot — enough for a laptop, cables, a change of clothes, and daily essentials without becoming a burden in crowded environments. The “Pro 2” designation indicates this is a refined second-generation product with improvements over the original City Pack line.

Editor’s Insight

Aer’s City Pack series has been one of the most recommended packs in the one-bag travel community for several years. The original City Pack established Aer’s organizational philosophy and material quality standards. The Pro 2 designation represents evolution rather than revolution — addressing the specific friction points that users identified in the original while maintaining the design language that made the bag successful in the first place.

Twenty liters is a deliberate choice that forces useful discipline. You cannot overpack a 20L bag. The capacity constraint becomes a feature — it encourages you to think carefully about what you actually need versus what you might want to bring. For commuters, this means a cleaner, lighter bag every day. For one-bag travelers, it means everything you bring is intentional.

Aer’s organizational approach centers on dedicated compartments that are sized for specific items. The laptop compartment is suspended (not touching the bottom of the bag — important for drops), sized for 16-inch laptops, and separated from the main compartment to keep the computer accessible without unpacking everything else. The external organization pockets are positioned for quick access to the items you reach for most frequently throughout the day.

The Cordura nylon construction is the right material choice for a daily-use bag. Cordura is inherently resistant to abrasion, water, and UV degradation — it will outlast polyester bags significantly. The weight penalty over lighter materials is real but justified for the durability return. A Cordura bag that’s still in excellent condition after five years of daily use represents better value than a lighter bag that starts showing wear within two years.

Pack Hacker’s two-week review is particularly useful for backpacks because comfort assessments change significantly with extended use. A bag might feel comfortable in a store for fifteen minutes but create shoulder fatigue after a full day of commuting. The harness system — strap width, padding density, sternum strap placement — determines whether the bag is something you wear or something you endure.

At 20L, the Aer City Pack Pro 2 competes directly with the Peak Design Everyday Backpack 20L, the Bellroy Transit Backpack, and similar premium offerings. What Aer has consistently done better than some competitors is create a bag that looks equally appropriate in a startup office and on a weekend trip — the aesthetic doesn’t broadcast “I’m a travel nerd” in professional environments.

For anyone who’s currently using a hiking pack, a cheap laptop bag, or a fashion backpack for their daily commute, the City Pack Pro 2 represents a meaningful upgrade. The investment is real, but so is the quality difference. Pack Hacker’s review gives you the extended use data to make a confident purchase decision. Their full comparison notes will put this pack in context against the alternatives they’ve tested. Worth watching in full on their channel.

Closing Remarks

Aer’s City Pack Pro 2 20L continues the brand’s strong track record in the premium commuter space. Pack Hacker’s two-week review gives you the complete picture — not just first impressions, but extended daily use performance. If a premium commuter pack is on your radar, this review is essential viewing. What’s your current daily carry bag? Let us know below. Affiliate links above support this blog at no extra cost to you.

Anker Nano Charging Station 7-in-1 100W Review: 5 Months of Real Use

By Tech, Travel, Video

Video Overview

Pack Hacker Reviews brings something rare to the charging station space: five months of actual daily use before publishing a verdict. Their evaluation of the Anker Nano Charging Station (7-in-1, 100W) goes well beyond spec comparisons to address the questions that matter after six months in a bag or on a desk — port quality, heat management, cable organization, and whether it earns its place as a permanent carry item. Lauren covers functionality, packability, and a useful direct comparison with Anker’s own 6-in-1 67W model. If you’re still juggling multiple individual chargers at your desk or in your bag, this video makes a compelling case for consolidation. Subscribe to the Pack Hacker Reviews channel for gear coverage across every travel and EDC category.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

The 7-in-1 100W is the primary subject at $49.99, positioned as a premium desktop solution for multi-device users who need laptop-class power delivery alongside phone and accessory charging. The 6-in-1 67W earns comparison time at $39.99 — same brand, similar form factor, meaningfully different output. The $10 price delta and corresponding capability gap provide a practical buying decision framework for anyone on the fence between the two.

Editor’s Insight

The charging station category gets less attention in EDC circles than it deserves. Most carry discussions focus on what goes in your pockets or bag, but the station that charges everything overnight is just as critical to a functional daily carry system. A well-organized charging station means every device starts each day at full battery — no hunting for cables, no choosing which device gets the one good outlet, no waking up to a dead laptop because the charge brick fell out of the socket overnight.

The 100W total output from the Anker Nano Charging Station 7-in-1 is the spec that separates it from phone-and-accessories power strips. Charging a MacBook Pro 16″ — which draws up to 96W at peak — to 50% in 33 minutes means this unit functions as a genuine laptop charger, not just a convenience hub. For anyone who has been managing a separate laptop power brick alongside their USB charging setup, eliminating that extra brick is a real reduction in carry complexity.

Seven ports across two form factors — USB-C and USB-A at the front, three AC outlets at the back — covers essentially any realistic home or travel charging scenario. The front-facing USB arrangement is a practical UX decision that sounds minor but matters in daily use: you’re not reaching behind a unit to plug in devices you’re actively using at a desk. The AC outlets at the back handle less-frequently accessed items: travel adapters, camera battery chargers, and devices that still require dedicated wall bricks.

Five months of testing is where this review becomes genuinely valuable. Consumer electronics often reveal their weaknesses in the 60–120 day window: heat management problems surface as component tolerances tighten, plastic housing develops microcracks near stress points from repeated thermal cycling, and USB ports start feeling loose from daily insertion and removal. Pack Hacker’s unit held up through five months of regular use, which is the data point that a first-impressions review can’t provide.

Anker’s ActiveShield safety system monitoring temperature 3,000,000 times daily is part of why Anker products tend to have strong longevity in this category. Thermal management is precisely where cheap charging hardware fails — budget power strips overheat, derate output, and occasionally fail in ways that damage connected devices. Paying for Anker’s engineering here is paying for that safety margin. For a device that’s plugged in continuously and has expensive electronics connected to it, that’s not a premium to begrudge.

The comparison between the 7-in-1 100W and the 6-in-1 67W illustrates a clean decision tree for buyers. The 67W model handles a MacBook Pro 13″ adequately (1 hour 54 minutes to full) and covers most smaller laptop and tablet use cases at a lower price point. The 100W model is the choice when your primary portable device draws more power — larger laptops, high-performance ultrabooks running demanding workloads, or when you want zero throttling on USB-C fast charging across multiple ports simultaneously.

The “Nano” branding signals the flat plug and slim form factor design. This matters for travel: traditional power strips with thick plugs frequently block adjacent outlets in hotel rooms, co-working spaces, and shared office environments. A flat plug sits flush against the wall and preserves the neighboring outlet for someone else — or for your own backup use. The slim cord design on the 6-in-1 follows the same philosophy: enough reach without creating a cable management problem.

The 75% post-consumer recycled plastics in the 6-in-1 model is a detail that increasingly factors into purchase decisions for environmentally conscious buyers. It doesn’t affect performance, but it represents a brand-level commitment to sustainable manufacturing that some buyers weight meaningfully. Anker has been consistent in applying these material standards across product lines, which suggests this isn’t a marketing one-off but an ongoing design priority. Big thanks to Pack Hacker Reviews for the patient long-form testing that makes this kind of recommendation credible — five months of daily use beats five days of spec sheet reading every time.

Closing Remarks

The Anker Nano Charging Station 7-in-1 100W justifies its price with seven ports, laptop-class 100W output, five months of proven reliability, and a flat-plug design that plays nicely in shared spaces. If your current desk or travel charging setup still involves multiple individual bricks and cable hunting every morning, this is the consolidation that simplifies your routine. What does your charging setup look like right now? Drop a comment below. Affiliate links support the blog at no extra cost to you.

Aer City Pack Pro 2: 20L vs 24L Comparison – Which One to Choose?

By Bags, Travel, Video

Few purchase decisions in the bag world are more agonizing than the size question: do you go smaller and force discipline on yourself, or do you go bigger and have room to breathe? Pack Hacker addresses this directly with a dedicated comparison video between the Aer City Pack Pro 2 in 20L and 24L configurations. This is exactly the kind of content that saves buyers from the second-guessing that typically follows a bag purchase — Pack Hacker has lived with both versions and can tell you which one actually works better for which use case.

Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video

Both the 20L and 24L versions of the Aer City Pack Pro 2 are featured here — the same bag design in two distinct sizes. Understanding the difference between them requires more than just looking at the liter count. The organization, access points, and carry experience may differ subtly between sizes, and Pack Hacker’s side-by-side comparison is designed to surface those differences for buyers who are genuinely torn.

Editor’s Insight

Aer has become one of the most respected names in the premium commuter and travel backpack category. Their City Pack line has iterated to the Pro 2 designation — meaning they’ve refined the original City Pack concept based on user feedback and competitive pressure. The Pro 2’s improvements likely center on organization refinements, material upgrades, or strap system improvements that the original version left room for.

The 20L vs 24L decision is ultimately about use case specificity. A 20L pack forces you to pack light — it’s the right choice if you’re committed to one-bag travel with strict packing discipline, or if you primarily use the pack for commuting and want it to stay manageable in crowded spaces. A 24L pack gives you meaningful flex room — a layer of clothing, a gym kit, or a larger tech pouch without sacrificing the organized structure the City Pack Pro 2 is built around.

Pack Hacker’s comparison format excels at the nuanced differences that size comparisons typically gloss over. It’s not just “the 24L is bigger” — it’s whether the added volume is useful volume (well-organized expansion) or dead volume (awkward empty space that makes the bag flop around when partially loaded). These distinctions only emerge through actual use, which is where their two-week testing protocol pays off.

Aer’s design philosophy centers on clean aesthetics with premium organization. Their bags consistently receive praise for their laptop compartments, external organization pockets, and the way the bag presents — it looks like a tech bag rather than a hiking bag, which matters enormously for professional environments. The City Pack Pro 2 in both sizes presumably maintains this aesthetic while offering the organizational depth Aer is known for.

The materials question is worth addressing for both sizes. Aer typically uses Cordura nylon and quality YKK zippers — materials that hold up over years of daily use rather than months. The investment in a bag at this price point is partly a bet that the bag will still be in excellent condition five years from now. The material quality determines whether that bet pays off.

From a practical standpoint: if you primarily commute and don’t travel regularly, the 20L is likely the right choice. It’s easier to carry through crowded transit, less likely to be gate-checked on a flight, and forces the kind of packing discipline that makes you more efficient over time. If you travel multiple times per month or regularly carry more than laptop plus basics, the 24L earns its extra volume.

Pack Hacker’s comparison methodology typically includes dimensional comparisons, weight comparisons, and a direct side-by-side of how specific real-world loads fit in each size. This is genuinely useful information that you can’t get from spec sheets alone. Check out the full video on their channel to see how the two sizes compare in practice.

Closing Remarks

Aer’s City Pack Pro 2 is available in two sizes, and Pack Hacker’s comparison video helps you make the call without buyer’s remorse. If you’re evaluating this pack, this comparison is required viewing before you order. Which size are you leaning toward? Let us know in the comments. Affiliate links above support this blog at no extra cost to you.

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