This review was made possible thanks to a review sample provided by Razer.
Razer had no input nor saw the contents of this review prior to publication.
Pricing-wise, this product is middle of the road for the Gamer Room.

The unboxing and setup experience is very simple.
This product is covered by Razer’s standard 1-year warranty.
They’re hollow and somewhat cheap feeling, though, despite the price tag.
They’re sleek, oblong cylinders with one side dominated by an uninterrupted strip of RGB LEDs.

Those RGB lights are of excellent quality, too.
You get a ton of customization options for those lights, as well.
Plug them in, fire up the Gamer Room mobile app, and pair!

The lights themselves look just as good as the rest of the Gamer Room.
As for placement, the Aether Standing Light Bars are designed to either face youorface the wall.
Personally, I preferred the rear-facing solution for more subtlety, but both are great.
More importantly, they’re simply too light, while the bases simultaneously lack grip.

A simple design and excellent software integration makes setup a breeze.(Image credit: Windows Central | Zachary Boddy)
Any minute adjustment of my wired accessories results in unwanted shifts and even complete falls.
These lights don’t want to stay in the same place.
It’s the advantage of an ecosystem.

It’s still unmistakably Razer, though.(Image credit: Windows Central | Zachary Boddy)
Why can’t we have both options for every product?
I don’t want to end this review on a negative note, though.
I wish the actual lights felt more premium, but the RGB lights are the real deal.

They’re smartly designed as a pair, but you can individually control them.(Image credit: Windows Central | Zachary Boddy)

The physical hardware feels cheap, especially the slippery bases.

If you’re already invested in the Razer Chroma ecosystem, these will fit right in.






















