
Goodhobbyist
Goodhobbyist propose une sélection curatée de jouets et de jeux pour les passionnés de loisirs de tous niveaux de compétence. Ils se concentrent sur la fourniture de produits de jeux et de collection de qualité pour les amateurs dédiés.
Découvrez les jeux et jouets que les vrais passionnés recherchent
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Elettronew
Elettronew est un détaillant d'électronique proposant une large gamme de produits électroniques grand public et technologiques. La marque offre des prix compétitifs sur les appareils électroniques neufs et tendance.
Découvrez la technologie tendance à des prix qui surprennent
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Realminiworld
Realminiworld.com is an online-only shop that laser-focuses on 1:64-scale die-cast cars, track sets, spare tires, decals and display cases aimed at adult collectors. Prices sit in the budget-to-mid range: individual cars run $6-15, limited “Real Color” batches $20-25, and bundled track or case kits top out around $80. Everything is sold direct-to-consumer through the brand’s U.S. site, with flat-rate global shipping and restock alerts via Discord and Instagram.
The brand’s edge is factory-fresh, officially licensed castings that are immediately stripped and re-sprayed in ultra-realistic, OEM-matching factory paint codes—something mass retail lines skip. Each release is capped at 500-1,200 pieces, numbered on the chassis, and shipped in a protective acrylic “Real Case” that doubles as a stackable display. Their “Real Track” snap-fit road courses are molded in muted asphalt gray with embedded magnet strips, letting 1:64 cars drift without the toy-like bright plastic seen elsewhere.
Core buyers are 25-45-year-old car enthusiasts who already hunt mainline castings but want display-worthy replicas without paying premium resin prices. They value scale accuracy, garage-built authenticity and the ability to buy limited runs at drop time instead of chasing store pegs. The brand’s Discord forum feeds the culture: members post wheel-swap tutorials, vote on the next colorway, and trade extras at retail-cost rules.
Realminiworld competes with both big-box die-cast brands and small-batch customizers; it undercuts the latter’s $40-60 price floor while offering sharper detailing than the former. By controlling small production slots in existing Chinese factories and selling only online, it keeps margins lean, turnover fast and scarcity real—no retail mark-ups, no overstock, and a collector community that polices flippers.
Factory colors, limited runs, no retail markup anywhere
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Maxkgo
MAXKGO fabrique des produits électroniques et des accessoires technologiques en mettant l'accent sur l'innovation et la praticité. La marque est reconnue pour ses produits fonctionnels et bien conçus.
Maxkgo transforme vos idées en gadgets pratiques et innovants
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Gobelpower
Un détaillant en électronique et solutions énergétiques proposant des batteries, des chargeurs et des produits liés à l'énergie.
Power your life with batteries, chargers, and energy solutions that keep you connected
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Hifov
HIFOV is a direct-to-consumer electronics label that focuses on ultra-short-throw laser projectors, portable smart projectors, and matching ambient-light-rejecting screens. Prices sit in the mid-range tier: current web listings run USD 1,200–2,800 for projectors and USD 250–600 for screens. The company sells exclusively through its own site and flagship Amazon store, with global fulfillment from warehouses in Shenzhen and Los Angeles.
The brand’s pitch centers on bringing “cinema-grade” ALPD laser brightness (2,500–3,500 ANSI lm) and 4K HDR processing to living rooms at roughly half the cost of legacy home-theater brands. Its best-known SKUs are the HIFOV L1 (0.23:1 throw ratio, 120-inch image from 25 cm) and the pocket-size P3 Pro with built-in Android TV 11 and 25,000-hour light source. All units ship pre-calibrated to 100% Rec.709 and advertise ≤ 30 ms input lag for gaming.
Core buyers are 25-45-year-old apartment dwellers and content creators who want a 100-plus-inch image without ceiling mounts or speaker clutter; Reddit and TikTok teardowns show the segment values price-to-lumen ratio and clean industrial design. The brand leans into minimalist Scandinavian aesthetics and carbon-neutral packaging to signal tech-savvy sustainability.
HIFOV competes in the crowded “affordable laser TV” space populated by Chinese OEMs and Kickstarter-born optics startups. It differentiates with longer warranty periods (three years on the light engine), U.S.-based repair depots, and firmware updates delivered OTA every quarter—support levels that budget projector makers normally reserve for their premium lines.
Cinema-grade laser projection without the legacy price tag or ceiling clutter
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DC HOUSE
DC HOUSE sells portable power stations, solar panels, lithium-ion batteries, inverters and associated 12 V/24 V accessories aimed at camper-van, marine and off-grid users. List prices run £149–£1,299, placing the range in the budget-to-mid tier; most transactions cluster around £400–£700. The brand is digital-native: orders are taken only through its UK webstore and fulfilled from a Midlands 3PL warehouse; there is no physical retail network.
The line-up centres on “house-grade” LiFePO₄ cells rated 2,000–5,000 cycles, packaged in ABS housings that are 30–40 % lighter than comparable lead-acid alternatives. Every power station ships with an MPPT controller, pure-sine inverter and USB-C PD ports as standard—features often sold separately by rivals. A five-year warranty and UK-based tech support line are promoted as key risk-reversers.
Buyers are cost-conscious van-lifers, narrowboat owners and allotment growers who need silent, emissions-free power but cannot justify premium outdoor brands. The brand speaks to self-sufficiency, weekend freedom and “repair-not-replace” values; 70 % of surveyed customers cite YouTube install videos and sub-£600 entry price as decisive.
Competition comes from white-label Amazon sellers and mid-tier Chinese OEMs trading on spec sheets alone. DC HOUSE differentiates by holding UKCA-certified stock, offering VAT invoices for trade buyers, and bundling spare fuses/Anderson adapters that simplify DIY fit-out—extras that typically add £60–£90 to competitor baskets.
Power your van life without the premium price tag
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