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Tom’s Hardware
Tom’s Hardware
Technology
Matt Safford

Cooler Master's Modular Stream Deck Competitor Snaps Together Like Lego

Cooler Master MasterHUB

From the Elgato Stream Deck line to the Loupedeck Live, macro / control decks for streaming, creative work and productivity are a big deal. Now, Cooler Master is getting into the market with its MasterHUB, which offers a unique twist. You put it together yourself, snapping your choice of modules onto a magnetic / pogo-pin backplate. 

We had a chance to check out the MasterHUB at Cooler Master's Computex 2023 demo suite and were impressed with both the build quality of the components themselves and how easily they snap on and off of the magnetic base. The 6 x 4-inch Flexbase base plate connects to your PC via Thunderbolt (USB-C) so it has plenty of bandwidth, though it's unclear if it would work on a non-Thunderbolt port.

The modules include:

  • Touch Display: 8-inch, 1280 x 800 screen that can be a secondary monitor or house various touch controls. 
  • Scrolling Wheel: Has two scrolling wheels that look and feel like the volume controls you'd find on a media keyboard.
  • Dial Module: has three small dials with backlights.
  • Dial Encoder module: Has a 1.3-inch dial with an IPS display on it you can use for displaying custom images. Offers fine-grain control for precise movements.
  • 15-Key Display module: Includes 15 customizable keys with displays on each (we didn't see this in person).
  • Slider module: This has five sliders you'd use for something like adjusting volume levels.
  • Two smaller display modules: We also saw a stout wide display module and one that took up about half the base.

The Flexbase appears to have connectors for up to six small, square modules. Wider or taller modules could take up two, four or all six slots. 

(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

A Cooler Master rep said that the company plans to sell MasterHUB both in a series of sets for particular use cases and as individual modules. The company showed off two particular sets: a Video Editor kit, which has the dial module, volume sliders, video encoder and a wide touch screen, and the Photo Editor kit, which has a taller touch screen, the scrolling wheel module, the video dial and the dial module.

(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

The MasterHUB uses Cooler Master software on your PC to help you configure it and make the most of it. You'll be able to not only set custom macros for creative applications such as Photoshop and Premiere, but also control and view the status of your CPU, GPU, RGB lights coolers. Cooler Master touts the Scrolling Wheel module specifically as good for controlling your fans, pumps and lighting. 

(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

There's no word yet on when the MasterHUB is coming to market and what it will cost. However, it looks like when it does, it will be giving Stream Deck and Loupedeck a serious run for their money.

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