Video Overview
Excessorize Me covers the dbrand Prism 2.0 Screen Protector — their follow-up to the original Prism with improved installation tooling, cleaner alignment, and the same durable tempered glass that dbrand users have come to expect. If installing screen protectors has ever been a source of frustration (bubbles, misalignment, one-shot stress), the Prism 2.0 is designed to take that friction out of the equation entirely.
Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video
- dbrand Prism 2.0 Screen Protector – Purchase on Amazon
The dbrand Prism 2.0 is the headline item and the focus of the entire video. For anyone who’s ever ruined a screen protector during installation — or paid someone else to install one just to avoid the experience — the Prism 2.0’s guided installation system is the feature that matters most.
Editor’s Insight
Screen protectors occupy a strange space in the accessory market. They’re among the most purchased phone and device accessories, yet they’re also among the most frequently botched. A misaligned protector with dust bubbles under the glass is worse than no protector at all — it’s a daily visual reminder that the installation went wrong. dbrand’s Prism 2.0 is a direct response to that frustration.
The original Prism established dbrand’s credibility in the tempered glass category. They brought the same precision approach from their skin product line to glass protection — meaning the cutouts, curves, and coverage area are engineered for the specific device rather than cut as a generic rectangle. The 2.0 iteration builds on that with improved installation tooling that makes alignment nearly automatic.
The installation experience is genuinely where the Prism 2.0 differentiates itself. Most tempered glass protectors include a basic alignment sticker at best. dbrand’s system uses physical guides that register against the device’s edges, removing the guesswork that causes most installation failures. For phones with curved glass or aggressive edge geometry, this matters significantly.
Tempered glass quality varies enormously in this category. Cheap alternatives use lower-grade glass with inconsistent hardness ratings and oleophobic coatings that wear off within weeks. dbrand’s tempered glass maintains its touch sensitivity and fingerprint resistance over a realistic ownership period — meaning the protector still feels good to use months after installation, not just on day one.
The Nintendo Switch 2 context here is worth noting given the video’s hashtags. The Switch 2’s screen is a significant target for protection given the console’s use as both a handheld and a docked device — it slides in and out of the dock regularly, creating friction opportunities that most phone screens don’t experience. A well-fitted, properly adhered protector is more critical for Switch 2 than for a phone that stays in a pocket.
dbrand’s Prism 2.0 pairs naturally with their Killswitch Case covered in a recent post — together they form a complete protection system where the case handles impact and the screen protector handles surface abrasion. The two products are designed to work together without lifting edges or creating gaps at the case boundary.
For the EDC-minded buyer, screen protection is about maintaining the display quality of a device you carry every day. A scratched screen on a phone or handheld isn’t just an aesthetic problem — it degrades the daily use experience in a way that compounds over time. The Prism 2.0’s approach of making correct installation accessible to everyone addresses the single biggest reason people end up with poorly protected screens.
Excessorize Me’s clip format delivers the essential information efficiently. For the full hands-on installation walkthrough and detailed impressions, check the full video linked in their description. Subscribe for ongoing coverage of the best device protection accessories in the everyday carry space.
Closing Remarks
The dbrand Prism 2.0 takes the stress out of screen protection by making correct installation the default rather than the exception. If your current screen protector is a compromised installation you’ve been meaning to replace, this is the upgrade worth making. What do you use to protect your screens? Drop it in the comments.
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