Monday, April 22nd 2024

Turtle Beach Dismantles ROCCAT Brand, Carries on Products and Support

The ROCCAT brand is officially reaching the end of its life today, as Turtle Beach has confirmed that ROCCAT will not be a separate brand anymore but rather integrated under the covers of Turtle Beach. Turtle Beach has noted: "We want to bring a greater level of integration to our family of products across console, PC and simulation. We felt that time and resources would be best spent focusing under a single brand and creating a range of products that matter most to gamers." ROCCAT was acquired by Turtle Beach in 2019 for $14.8 million to strengthen the company's positioning in the PC accessories market. At the time, ROCCAT's lineup of gaming keyboards, mice, headsets, and other peripherals complemented Turtle Beach's console-oriented product mix.

In a FAQ posted on its website, Turtle Beach also added: "While we'll be retiring the ROCCAT brand, many of its iconic product lines like the Vulcan, Kone, Burst and Sense will transition under the Turtle Beach brand. Our commitment to PC products remains as strong as ever and we have several ground-breaking new products to introduce as well as Turtle Beach-branded versions of popular existing ROCCAT products sticking around." For product support, the same teams are handling any customer support, and the company has merged them into a single new website, which handles tech and customer questions at support.turtlebeach.com. For returns, the company also takes care of ROCCAT products. The ROCCAT Swarm software will continue to work, even with Swarm II scheduled for a debut this year in Spring. From now on, all products will be under a single brand but will target the same audience. Turtle Beach will also rebrand the social media channels from ROCCAT to Turtle Beach PC. Refer to the FAQ posted on the official company website for more inquiries.
Source: Turtle Beach FAQ
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34 Comments on Turtle Beach Dismantles ROCCAT Brand, Carries on Products and Support

#26
Cr4zy
Wonder if there will be a spin off company from ex-roccat employees who will keep making their unique style of mouse. The Kone shape is so nice for me and i've got a few Kone Pro Airs, guess i'll be recycling parts out of them for as long as possible. Turtle beach might be a big brand name in America, but outside of it I don't know. I haven't seen a Turtle Beach product in the UK in a long time, not saying Roccat was a brand name but Turtle Beach is not a name that comes up on anyones radar I know when it comes to PC peripherals.
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#27
cvaldes
Cr4zyWonder if there will be a spin off company from ex-roccat employees who will keep making their unique style of mouse. The Kone shape is so nice for me and i've got a few Kone Pro Airs, guess i'll be recycling parts out of them for as long as possible. Turtle beach might be a big brand name in America, but outside of it I don't know. I haven't seen a Turtle Beach product in the UK in a long time, not saying Roccat was a brand name but Turtle Beach is not a name that comes up on anyones radar I know when it comes to PC peripherals.
It really depends on where you live and how long you've been paying attention to tech hardware.

Turtle Beach (founded in 1975) earned a good reputation for their PC audio products in the Nineties and early 2000s. Then they switched gears and focused on videogame console peripherals, starting with headsets. That's when a lot of people became familiar with them.

So in this latest twist of abandoning the Roccat brand, Turtle Beach is trying to return to their PC roots in some way. Should they have kept the Roccat brand? There are arguments for and against but Roccat basically went into hibernation after the acquisition which doesn't help Turtle Beach's efforts today.

My guess is that key Roccat employees and management left years ago. The best and brightest are always the first to leave as they are the ones with the best opportunities elsewhere.
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#28
Minus Infinity
God I hadn't even realised Turd Beach was still around. Haven't heard that name in forever. Roccat however is a different matter. They really got this ass backwards.
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#29
Totally
natr0n
All we can hope is that gaming stops being mainstream and goes back to being a counter-culture or subculture where the creators necessarily didn't care who the audience was or the numbers.
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#30
cvaldes
TotallyAll we can hope is that gaming stops being mainstream and goes back to being a counter-culture or subculture where the creators necessarily didn't care who the audience was or the numbers.
LOL, that'll never happen now that everyone has a device in their pocket that will play games (i.e., smartphone).

That ship sailed a LONG time ago.

A more realistic hope is for young people in emerging economies to create a new gaming culture that is less corporate and greedy. But as every company grows there is always more pressure for management to appease shareholders first.

The biggest challenge to that are the videogamers themselves. It is a perpetually immature audience that has very, Very, VERY low standards for quality (that are constantly dropping).

Hell, if you think today's Turtle Beach is a vendor of schlockware, that's the gamer audience's fault. Have problems with Blizzard? Bethesda? Razor? You know who to blame.
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#31
Totally
cvaldesLOL, that'll never happen now that everyone has a device in their pocket that will play games (i.e., smartphone).

That ship sailed a LONG time ago.

A more realistic hope is for young people in emerging economies to create a new gaming culture that is less corporate and greedy. But as every company grows there is always more pressure for management to appease shareholders first.

The biggest challenge to that are the videogamers themselves. It is a perpetually immature audience that has very, Very, VERY low standards for quality (that are constantly dropping).

Hell, if you think today's Turtle Beach is a vendor of schlockware, that's the gamer audience's fault. Have problems with Blizzard? Bethesda? Razor? You know who to blame.
Hey, can't a guy just hope.
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#32
azrael
Vayra86I can't say I'm too bothered with fewer 'gamur' brands.

Just good peripherals don't need gaming sauce. In fact, I kinda dread buying anything gamer related. Its generally junk.
The problem is that good peripherals usually aren't made unless they are for people with deep pockets. We certainly wouldn't have seen the resurgence of mechanical keyboards if not for the "g4m0r" crowd. Personally, I wish it weren't so, but it is.
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#33
Vayra86
azraelThe problem is that good peripherals usually aren't made unless they are for people with deep pockets. We certainly wouldn't have seen the resurgence of mechanical keyboards if not for the "g4m0r" crowd. Personally, I wish it weren't so, but it is.
Mechanical keyboards.. hehe. They are more prone to maintenance, loud, and you can get a tactile switch from a chiclet kb too. The selling point is supposed to be a faster and more accurate response, we even have higher polling rate BS on mechs now. Its in the same placebo realm as a 360hz screen.

Its mostly bullshit and marketing.
The developments dont need gamer sauce. Lots of truly great innovations in keyboards are not gamer oriented, they are enthusiast oriented. DIY PC and gaming crowds might overlap but we can easily lose the gamer sauce imho.

There are lots of just fine peripherals for cheap. If you want better you pay the premium. But on gamer stuff you pay the premium and get budget junk.
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#34
azrael
Vayra86Mechanical keyboards.. hehe. They are more prone to maintenance, loud, and you can get a tactile switch from a chiclet kb too. The selling point is supposed to be a faster and more accurate response, we even have higher polling rate BS on mechs now. Its in the same placebo realm as a 360hz screen.

Its mostly bullshit and marketing.
The developments dont need gamer sauce. Lots of truly great innovations in keyboards are not gamer oriented, they are enthusiast oriented. DIY PC and gaming crowds might overlap but we can easily lose the gamer sauce imho.

There are lots of just fine peripherals for cheap. If you want better you pay the premium. But on gamer stuff you pay the premium and get budget junk.
I agree that the usual selling points are pure BS. That said, a mechanical key switch is superior to a membrane, chiclet etc. one. And a mechanical keyboard doesn't have to be loud. Of course, that depends on the switch type and also how the keyboard itself is constructed. To be fair, I did have a membrane keyboard that lasted close to 20 years. However, build quality like that seems impossible to find these days.

EDIT: Somehow forgot to specify the number of years.
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