All the winners from the 2024 Australian PC Awards
All the best gear you'll crave, right here with awards aplenty!
- Motherboard Maker
- Value Motherboard
- Premium Motherboard
- Graphics Card Maker
- Value Graphics Card
- Premium Graphics Card
- Value CPU
- Mid-range CPU
- Premium CPU
- Internal Storage Maker
- External Storage Maker
- Value Laptop
- Premium Laptop
- Gaming Laptop
- Desktop PC Maker
- Memory Maker
- Cooling Product
- Monitor
- Keyboard
- Mouse
- Gaming Headset
- PC Case
- Router
- Reseller
- Excellence Award
- Gold Award
- Epic Fail
Here it is gamers and hardware enthusiasts—the expert picks from the team here at PC Gamer, aided by our skilled and opinionated colleagues at TechRadar, APC, PC PowerPlay and Tom's Guide. The mission: to tap the very best gear released in Australia through 2023.
Together we locked ourselves away for days, debating, appraising, and revisiting tech we'd reviewed, and hardly any rage or throwing of sharp heavy objects.
The gear and companies below are what we deem to be the best of the best. Across 27 categories, we've covered all the important bits inside and outside a PC, the things that plug into a PC, and the companies that make the good gear.
Plus, our big and important major awards—Gold for best company overall, Excellence for the tech, product or person that advanced the PC the most in 2023, and the Epic Fail Award, which rewards epic failure.
Soak it all up, and be inspired. If you've a hankering to upgrade, the gear here is the good stuff.
Congratulations to all the companies and people that put in extra hard work to make PC gear that's now indisputably the best!
Words by Ben Mansill, Joel Burgess and Chris Szewczyk.
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What are the Australian PC Awards?
Our awards cover all the main categories that affect the PC, as well as our special awards:
Excellence Award: Presented to the person, product or technology that advanced the PC more than any other in 2023.
Gold Award: For the best overall company operating in the PC space for 2023. This list includes every one of the finalists across all the other categories – and has been carefully considered by our expert panel of judges.
And of course there must be balance with all things, which leads us to this year’s Epic Fail Award. May the most dismal failure win!
Australian PC Awards Winners 2024
In the absence of a major new platform or socket release, 2023 was a relatively quiet year for new motherboard releases. But that doesn't mean there weren't any new models.
The highlight of 2023 was the release of a wave of refreshed Z790 motherboards. They accompanied Intel's 14th Generation CPU range and they introduced a few new, and welcome features. They'll end up being the best and last LGA 1700 motherboards to be released before Intel switches to the LGA 1851 socket in late 2023 or early 2024.
The headline new feature was the introduction of support for Wi-Fi 7, the next generation networking standard. Of course, they have out of the box support for 14th Generation processors, along with generally beefed up power delivery systems, improved USB capabilities and support for much faster DDR5 memory. Some Z790 refresh boards even unofficially support DDR5-8000 and higher.
Things were relatively quiet on the AMD front, with the entry level A620 chipset being the only new chipset to be released, and it was a quiet launch at that. A620 motherboards are best paired with AMD's 65W-class processors and entry level builds. Most of the B650 and X670 motherboards on the market during 2023 were released in 2022. Not that they're 'old'. A good AM5 motherboard will remain relevant for years to come.
Best Motherboard Maker
Asrock
Asrock doesn't promote itself to the extent Gigabyte, MSI and particularly Asus do, but saving millions of dollars on marketing means it can offer high quality and feature rich motherboards at more affordable prices. What's not to like about that?
All Finalists
Best Value Motherboard
MSI MAG B760M Mortar Max WiFi
A classy all round and feature rich motherboard that makes some more expensive boards look overpriced. Alongside its lovely looks and strong VRM, it's one of very few motherboards that can overclock locked 12th Gen processors.
• Read the full PC Gamer review
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Asus TUF Gaming B650 Plus WIFI
- MSI MAG B760M Mortar Max WiFi
- MSI MAG Z790 Tomahawk Max WiFi
- Asrock Z790 Riptide WiFi
- Asus TUF Gaming Z790-Pro WiFi
- Asrock B760M PG Sonic WiFi
- Asus ROG Strix B760-F Gaming WiFi
Best Premium Motherboard
A bold release from Asrock that drops the premium aesthetic of the regular Z790 Taichi while retaining all of its features, saving a lot of money in the process. Hopefully it won't be the last motherboard to adopt such an approach.
• Read the full Tom's Hardware review
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Asrock Z790 Taichi Lite
- MSI Z790I Edge Wi-Fi Mini-ITX
- Gigabyte Z790 Aorus Master X
- Asus ROG Maximus Z790 Dark Hero
- Asrock Z790 Nova Wi-Fi
After a tumultuous period during the pandemic and the sudden collapse of demand from miners, the graphics card market is still somewhat struggling for a return to normalcy. Prices remain elevated and it doesn’t help that there's a new and extremely lucrative drag on optimal supply. Of course, we’re talking about AI.
High end cards remain overpriced. Just a few years back, spending $1,000 would have gotten you a flagship card, but now that kind of money will only get you an upper mid-range card. With console supply stabilising in 2023, it's understandably tough for PC gamers to justify spending the really big bucks on high end cards, especially given ongoing cost of living pressures.
Things aren’t that rosier at the more affordable end of the market. Capable options like the RTX 4060 and RX 7600 are essentially entry level GPUs at mid-range prices. Sure, you have good technologies such as DLSS 3, FSR3 and frame generation, but native performance still matters, and spending $500 to $600 on a graphics card from Nvidia or AMD should deliver a little bit more both in terms of base specifications and performance.
Of course, we can't forget Intel either. Though they got off to a rocky start, Intel's Arc cards have come a long way and are definitely worth considering at the budget end of the market after many welcome driver updates.
Best Graphics Card Maker
MSI
Once again, MSI's graphics cards impress with an excellent balance of performance, efficient cooling at low noise levels and aesthetics. And they're very competitive at all price points.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
Best Value Graphics Card
MSI GeForce RTX 4060 Ventus Black 2X
In a tough year for budget gaming, MSI's RTX 4060 Ventus is an affordable option that offers decent performance for the money, especially when Nvidia;s DLSS 3 and Frame Generation technologies are factored in.
Read the full PC Gamer Review here
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- MSI GeForce RTX 4070 Gaming X Trio
- MSI GeForce RTX 4060 Ventus Black 2X
- Asus Dual RTX 4060 Ti OC Edition
- PowerColor Radeon RX 7600 Fighter
- Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 7800 XT
- AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT
- Nvidia RTX 4070
- Intel Arc A750
- Intel Arc A580
Best Premium Graphics Card
Gigabyte RTX 4070 Ti Gaming OC
Gigabyte's RTX 4070 Ti Gaming takes out the top gong thanks to its combination high performance, excellent efficiency and value for money. If spending the really big bucks turns you off. Look right here.
Read the full PC Gamer review
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Gigabyte RTX 4070 Ti Gaming OC
- Asus ROG Strix GeForce RTX 4090 OC EVA-02 Edition
- MSI GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Gaming X Trio
- Zotac Gaming GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Twin Edge OC SPIDER-MAN™
- Sapphire Pulse Radeon RX 7900 XT
- AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE
- Nvidia RTX 4070 Ti
2023 saw the release of some excellent processors, all the way from the budget end of the market to the high end.
The year started with the launch of Intel's 65W 13th Generation CPUs. There were some gems among them including the excellent Core i5 13400, which remains one of our favourite budget CPUs, but the real star of the show ended up being AMD's value champ, the Ryzen 5 7500F.
AMD's gaming prowess was again on show, with Zen 4 models equipped with stacked cache providing excellent gaming performance and power efficiency. In fact, the gaming performance of the Ryzen 7 7800X3D is so good, it can match and beat anything Intel has to offer.
Never write off Intel though. Later in the year we saw the launch of the 14th Generation K-series CPUs. Though in most cases they are essentially overclocked 13th Generation chips, they remain competitive options, even if they're power hungry and run hot when presented with heavy loads.
At the prosumer and enterprise end of the market, AMD continues to excel, presenting Intel with very tough competition that it cannot yet match. The battle resumes in 2024.
Best Value CPU
AMD's entry level Zen 4 CPU punches well above its weight, offering class leading performance and power efficiency at a price that makes it very hard to justify spending more on a six-core CPU.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
Best Mid-range CPU
If you're a gamer first and foremost, this is the chip to buy. Games tend to thrive thanks to its voluminous cache, while its low power consumption embarrasses its competitors.
• Read the full Tom's Hardware review
Highly Commended
All Finalists
Best Premium CPU
The 14900K wins by virtue of its excellent all round performance, even if it is a variant of 12th and 13th Gen models. Whether it's productivity, creativity, or gaming, the i9 14900K is competitive, as long as you keep it cool.
• Read the full Tom's Hardware review
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- AMD Ryzen 9 7900
- AMD Ryzen 7950X3D
- Intel 13900KS
- Intel Core i9-14900K
- AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D
- AMD Threadripper 7980X
- AMD Ryzen 9 7900X3D
2023 saw the proliferation of PCI Express 5.0 SSDs. The latest and greatest drives are capable of well over 10GB/s of blazing speed, though they do get a bit hot and require some extravagant cooling to run at their full speeds – an ongoing problem that has yet to be addressed.
With USB Type-C connectivity becoming all but ubiquitous, it's become easier than ever to transfer files between your PC, phone or tablet. Manufacturers took the opportunity to expand their portfolios of USB-C storage products.
And if there's one thing we can say with 100% certainty, it's that the humble mechanical hard drive isn't going away any time soon. As long as the amount of data we generate continues to grow, so will the need for large capacity hard drives to hold it all.
Best Internal Storage Maker
The ever reliable Crucial offers a full range of storage options, from budget to high end. It led the way for first generation PCIe 5.0 drives and its products are very price competitive in a crowded market.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
Best External Storage Maker
SSDs are the future of portable storage and Samsung continues to excel with high performing, reliable and price competitive options including the T9-series portable SSDs.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
2023 was a massive year for laptop screens and processors, adding major benefits to appearance and performance across the board. Apple ditched the MacBook Pro 13-inch for the first time in a decade and released a new MacBook Air 15, we got a novel 18-inch gaming laptop category that really pushed the envelope of desktop replacement devices, and OLED came to budget-conscious laptops that cost as little as $1K.
We also experienced multiple releases of Apple silicon (M2 Ultra, M3 range), 12th and 13th Gen Intel CPUs, the first Intel ARC laptop GPUs, Nvidia’s 40 series graphics cards and AMD’s Ryzen 7000 and Radeon 6000 series processors all thrown into a season of diverse and advanced laptop launches.
The first foldable laptops emerged from Asus, HP and Lenovo, with some promising attributes offered by the new format, but probably not enough to see the category make a mainstream comeback just yet. The Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 is still the most versatile and useful 2-in-1 for creatives that need a stylus in our opinion.
20 hour battery life spans on Apple’s MacBook Pro and Air range are still probably the biggest standout feature of laptops in 2023, but both AMD and Intel have worked hard to reclaim performance leads from Apple processors in the laptop segment (even if they need more power to do so). Higher resolution, brighter and more colour accurate screens became standard on pro laptops across the board and GPU performance continued to be heavily influenced by the amount of cooling infrastructure included by laptop vendors.
Best Value Laptop or 2-in-1
The latest AMD Ryzen or Intel Core processors, a high resolution OLED screen and enough memory and storage to last years; everything you could want and costs as little as $997 on sale.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Lenovo Legion Pro 5i
- Acer Swift Go 14
- Asus Zenbook 13 S OLED
- Gigabyte G5
- Dell G16 7630
- Microsoft Surface Laptop Go 3
- Apple MacBook Air 15
- Framework 13 AMD
- Acer Aspire 7
- HP Pavilion Aero
Best Premium Laptop or 2-in-1
Apple MacBook Pro (M3)
Apple’s M3 processors offer up to 20% performance improvements and the MacBook Pro range is still the only creative Ultrabook that you’d really consider using on battery power alone, making it the 2023 benchmark again.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Apple MacBook Pro (M3)
- Asus Vivobook Pro 16X OLED
- Dell XPS 13 Plus (9320)
- Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2
- HP Spectre X360
- Apple MacBook Pro (M2)
- Lenovo Yoga Slim 9i
- Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11
- Asus ExpertBook B9 OLED
- Razer Blade 14
Best Gaming Laptop
Outstanding components, a 17.6-inch 240Hz QHD panel and the power to push games well over 100fps make the Strix Scar an excellent gaming laptop, but it’s also the best value high-end gaming rig of 2023.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Asus ROG Strix Scar 17
- Razer Blade 14
- Acer Nitro 5
- Asus ROG Zephyrus M16
- Alienware m18
- Lenovo Legion Pro 5i (Gen8)
- HP Victus 16
- MSI Stealth 16 Mercedes-AMG Motorsport A13V
- Asus ROG Zephyrus G14
- Asus ROG Strix Scar 17 (2023)
- Acer Predator Helios 16
- Asus ROG Strix Scar 17
- Razer Blade 14
- Acer Nitro 5
- Asus ROG Zephyrus M16
- Alienware m18
- Lenovo Legion Pro 5i (Gen8)
- HP Victus 16
- MSI Stealth 16 Mercedes-AMG Motorsport A13V
- Asus ROG Zephyrus G14
- Asus ROG Strix Scar 17 (2023)
- Acer Predator Helios 16
Best Desktop PC Maker
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Mwave
- Apple
- Allied
- Lenovo
- Corsair
- Alienware
- Acer
- HP
- Dell
- Thermaltake
- BPCTech
- JW
- Aftershock PC
- CentreCom
- PC Case Gear
This is the single biggest category of the Awards, and is arguably the most important. Whether upgrading a single part, or building from scratch, these are the things you will be thinking about most, and planning most carefully.
Over the course of 2023 we saw decent incremental evolution with many components and peripherals. DDR5 memory became commonplace, and speeds rose and timings fell. Juiced up CPUs and graphics cards demanded better cooling, and better case design, and the companies behind this gear delivered.
Monitors and networking, especially, saw big leaps as OLED hit its stride, and prices fell. Wi-Fi 7 entered the game, though Wi-Fi 6 still holds court for the time being.
2023 saw old players enter new arenas, familiar product lines were refined and evolved, and with the covid-induced pricing panic largely behind us, it’s a great time to upgrade with some nice new kit.
Best Memory Maker
G.Skill
G.Skill's memory covers every segment of the market, from ultra-enthusiast kits to more generic kits for basic systems. No matter how much capacity or speed you need, G.Skill has memory to suit.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
Best Cooling Product
Fans are items every PC needs. Then there's the Lian Li Uni fans with built in 1.6-in LCD screens. They look absolutely incredible. You might not need them, but you probably want them.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Corsair iCUE H100i Elite LCD XT
- Asus ROG Ryuo III 360
- Teamgroup Siren Duo360
- Thermaltake TH240 V2 Ultra
- Corsair iCUE Link Ecosystem
- Lian Li UNI FAN TL LCD
- Thermalright Peerless Assassin
Best Monitor
Samsung wasn’t going to be beaten by Alienware (or Asus) this year, offering a 49-inch ultrawide with a uniquely fast 240Hz refresh rate and 0.03ms response rate in the Double QHD format that is a sweet spot for ultra premium gaming.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- MSI Optix G274QPF-QD
- HyperX Armada 27
- Acer Predator X32 FP
- MSI 342C QD-OLED
- Asus ROG Swift OLED PG27AQDM
- AOC Gaming 24G2SP
- Dell 24 P2423D
- Asrock PG34WQ15R2B
- Philips Evnia 34M2C8600
- Samsung Odyssey OLED G9
- Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 G95NC
- Asus ROG Swift OLED PG49WCD
Best Keyboard
Logitech G PRO X TKL Lightspeed
A perfect combination of rock solid durability and materials, combined with near-perfect layout and size. We especially like the media controls and volume wheel, and the wireless-plus-Bluetooth functionality that switches with a single button makes it a keyboard that can move from your PC to TV effortlessly.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Ducky One 3 Aura Keyboard
- Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro
- Logitech G PRO X TKL Lightspeed
- Asus Rog Strix Scope II 96 Wireless
- Corsair K70 Max
Best Mouse
The Superlight 2 does the basics, and it does them really, really well. Its cloudlike lightness makes it ideal for fast, intense games, but it's a brilliant pointer for much more than just that. With super-smooth gliding and an excellent sensor, it'll be a fantastic choice for gaming and productivity.
Read the full Tom's Hardware review
All Finalists
- MSI Clutch GM51 Wireless Gaming Mouse
- Benq Zowie EC-CCW
- Logitech G PRO X Superlight 2
- SteelSeries Aerox 5 wireless
- Glorious Model O 2 Wireless
- Razer DeathAdder V3
Best Gaming Headset
Thanks to its audiophile-grade planar drivers, the Audeze Maxwell sounds fantastic, whether you’re gaming, chatting, or listening to music. You won’t find a better-sounding gaming headset at (or near) this price point.
Read the full Tom's Hardware review
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- HyperX Cloud III
- Razer BlackShark V2 Pro (2023)
- HyperX Cloud Alpha Wireless
- Corsair HS55 Wireless
- Audeze Maxwell
- Corsair HS80 RGB
- JBL Quantum TWS
- SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro
- Corsair HS65 Surround Wireless
Best PC Case
The Fractal Terra is a striking and mostly well-thought-out Mini-ITX case. Fractal has once again delivered one of the prettiest cases available – especially if you want a respite from the RGB and aggressive designs that dominate the gaming side of the PC realm.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- TT Ceres
- MSI MPG Velox 100P Airflow
- Corsair iCUE 4000D RGB Airflow
- Asus Prime AP201
- Nzxt H9 Flow
- MSI MEG Prospect 700R
- Thermaltake CTE C750 Air
- Be Queit! Shadow Base 800 FX
- HYTE Y70 Touch
- Fractal Terra
Best Router
2023 (eventually) gave us a glimpse of Wi-Fi 7's potential, but Asus’ budget TUF Gaming AX4200 wins thanks to its outstanding performance, features and value proposition.
Read the full PC Gamer review
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Asus ROG Rapture GT-AXE16000
- Asus ROG Rapture GT6 gaming mesh
- MSI RadiX AX6600 WiFi 6 Gaming Router
- Asus TUF Gaming AX4200
- DrayTek Vigor2135ax
- Netgear Nighthawk A8000
- TP-Link Deco XE200 AX11000
- Asus RT-AX1800S
In 2023 resellers were doing their utmost to provide value-for-money offerings in their pre-built system lineups. With inflation hitting hard and graphics card prices still sky-high we saw resellers doing anything and everything to supply systems that provided value for money while still offering decent performance.
This usually manifested in resellers offering systems with previous generation parts in the pursuit of lowering costs. This often meant 12th or even 10th-generation Intel CPUs were used and AM4 socket parts for AMD systems. SSD capacities would often get reduced and be supplemented with larger, cheaper, hard drives. Lower-end motherboard chipsets were also often favoured.
It wasn’t all like that, if you had the money you certainly could have the latest and greatest of everything, so long as you were happy to tip your wallet out. Given the environment the retailers are working in they adapted well to offer the best value for customers.
This year we’d expect to see this trend continue. And although prices for most PC parts have come off the boil since the pandemic, GPUs remain stubbornly expensive. We hope to see change on that front but at this moment there’s no sign of relief yet.
Best Reseller
Mwave takes this Award thanks to the absolutely massive range it holds in stock, a well designed site with excellent search filters, along with speedy delivery and, in our personal experience, great service.
Highly Commended
Other Finalists
- Allied Gaming PC
- Austin
- BPCtech
- Centre Com
- Computer Alliance
- CPL Online
- IJK
- JW
- Mwave
- PC Case Gear
- PLE
- Scorptec
- Umart
- MSY
Excellence Award
For the person, product or technology that advanced the PC more than any other in 2023.
2023 was indisputably the year of AI. From the gob-smacking first impressions that stunned the world as we toyed with the human-like answers to the most penetrating and absurd questions we could pose, to the speed at which it crafted its information, and the joyous thrill of having it create art that could be both beautiful and wonderfully ridiculous – it seemed like magic.
Then, as the real-world benefits became apparent, it was clear this was a world-changing tech and one that was, incredibly, still in its infancy. As programmers discovered how well it could compile code, as writers found an assistant that was astonishingly usable, as students had a homework and research partner that helped them understand a topic, but also write about it with intelligence and accuracy, reality set in. Nothing would ever be the same again.
ChapGPT is without doubt the poster child for the AI revolution. Now it’s on your Windows 11 desktop as Microsoft Copilot, and will be pervasive in many unexpected ways as it evolves. It hasn’t all been sunshine and roses – with fundamental change comes a very definite human impact. Jobs will change, and be lost, the economies of many businesses will be upturned, and calls for regulation and sensible use grow louder.
Still, there is no contest. Nothing else came close in 2023 – being the year that AI arrived and shook the world to its foundations.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- DLSS 3.5
- Mark Zuckerberg / Threads
- ARM
- Intel Arc
- Apple M3
- Handheld PC gaming
- ChatGPT
- AMD Threadripper
- Microsoft Copilot
Gold Award
The company that impressed us the most, overall, in 2023.
Over the last few years MSI has had a laser-like focus on expanding its product range, and delivering quality and innovation that shows it’s clearly going for market domination. It has entered new areas, like storage, monitors, and now, networking, and done so with conviction.
We can easily see that the company is not just testing the waters – and that’s what impresses us most of all. MSI typically arrives in a new segment with an extremely high quality product to launch with, then doubles down to expand the range, and with generally no duds. Each new product is genuinely innovative in some way, and the company has resisted the temptation to flood the market with dull me-too clones.
Each new product and segment launch has been impressive. The Spatium SSD range now has over a dozen models. Its monitors are especially interesting and always score highly in our reviews. 2023 saw its first router released, and it came so very close to winning Best Router in these awards.
MSI hasn’t been relaxing, it keeps pushing hard and we’re now at the point where any new MSI product release is one we sit up and take notice of. It’s gone from being a company that would release dozens of motherboards in a single year each with only minor differences, to one where the range is tighter, and the innovation, features and quality have markedly improved. MSI is simply the most exciting company today that delivers across the entire PC components, peripherals and accessories space.
All Finalists
- Acer
- Adata
- Aftershock
- Alienware
- Allied Gaming PC
- AMD
- Apple
- Asrock
- Asus
- Audeze
- Austin
- Be Quiet
- BenQ
- BPCtech
- Centre Com
- Computer Alliance
- Corsair
- CPL Online
- Crucial
- DeepCool
- Dell
- Draytek
- Ducky
- Dynabook
- Framework
- Fractal Design
- Framework
- G.Skill
- Gigabyte Aorus
- Glorious
- HP
- HyperX
- IJK
- Intel
- JBL
- JW
- Kingston
- LaCie
- Leader
- Lenovo
- Lian Li
- Logitech
- Microsoft
- MSI
- MSY
- Mwave
- Nvidia
- Nzxt
- PC Case Gear
- PLE
- PNY
- Powercolour
- Razer
- Samsung
- SanDisk
- Sapphire Technology
- Scorptec
- Seagate
- SteelSeries
- Synology
- Team Group
- Thermalright
- TP-Link
- Umart
- WD
- XFX
- XPG
- Zotac
Epic Fail
2023's biggest loser.
Twitter / X was once the world’s most important source of breaking news and discussion. It was a playground for silliness and fun, too. It was a place where you could stay on top of your favourite celebrity, sportsperson or musician’s latest thoughts. It was also addictive knowing that most of your friends and colleagues would see your own post as soon as it was made, and immediately following that, the engagement as a new conversation was started. It even allowed you to participate in debates, often with famous and important people.
It is no longer any of those things. And, that’s a crying shame considering how rapid its downfall has been. Engagement has fallen through the floor, thus removing any personal or commercial incentive to post. Bots run amok, and you can no longer trust what you read. Moderation has become virtually non-existent, and the site is now heavily polluted with hate speech, with extreme political and social viewpoints being boosted into visibility that’s impossible to ignore.
And, it’s all seemingly by design. The great tragedy is that one man, Elon Musk, has the power to cook up a version of global discussion that suits his own agenda and ever-surprising beliefs, and depressingly, for his own notoriety and ego, too. Sadly, he is wielding that power. Almost every day we see his posts unavoidably pinned to the top of the feed, endorsing hate speech, ridiculing those who dare criticise him, and empowering an undeniably one-sided viewpoint. Musk is now, at best, petty and vindictive, at worst – a barrier to free speech, fair elections and open discussion of critical issues.
Witness the explosive growth of Mark Zuckerberg’s Threads when it launched. Twitter has been abandoned by huge numbers, and many flocked to Threads hoping for a new platform – which is why Threads appears in our Excellence finalists. Alas Zuck’s app was launched half baked – which is why it also is a finalist for Epic Fail. Still, the message is clear. Twitter is over.
Musk has used Twitter for election interference, for example shutting down access during the Turkish elections. He has mass-banned impartial journalists, he has rigged the rankings and algorithms to promote hate and violence, or to boost his businesses, and those of his investors. He is encouraging division and fuelling antagonistic conversation. He is not a ‘free-speech’ absolutist’, he is a hate-monger, and it’s a horrible loss to the world that we no longer have a vibrant, engaging and flourishing platform for thoughts and discussion.
Highly Commended
All Finalists
- Elon Musk and Twitter/X
- Nvidia RTX 4060 Ti 8GB
- Starfield
- Mark Zuckerberg / Threads
- Google Play Store (Epic monopoly case loss)
- Alphacool Apex Stealth
- Samsung 980//990 Pro SSD failures (bad firmware)
- Nvidia RTX 4060 Ti 16GB
- Apple walled garden
- ChatGPT CEO kerfuffle
Last year's winners
See who won last year right here!