MSI Mystic Knight Gaming Backpack review

REVIEW – Carrying your EDC loadout for work is usually not that much stuff. Laptop, lunch, maybe your meds and a few cables. But if you’re a gamer, and have a full portable rig for setting up shop in another location, you need more space. MSI, a company that makes a lot of gaming gear like mice, laptops, and headphones, now has a way for you to carry those essentials from place to place: The Gaming Backpack. I was sent the Mystic Knight model to test.

Note: Photos may be tapped or clicked for a larger image.

What is it?

The Mystic Knight is a roll-top gaming backpack with a few interesting pocket combinations, reflective safety graphics, and a flexible strap system. You can easily grab your laptop from outside without having to undo the roll-top closure.

Design and features

The MSI Mystic Knight is a stealth black backpack that is water-resistant in fabric choices as well as zipper closures. There’s even a rain shell stored in a hidden pouch on the bottom of the pack if it gets to be more than a drizzle. For organization, there is a massive main compartment that can hold just about anything you can throw at it, short of a kitchen sink. Seriously, it will seal fully at 25” tall by 14” wide and 4.5” thick. The inside is a waterproof dark grey/grey-green camo pattern. The top can be rolled down for easier access if desired.

This main compartment is divided from the laptop compartment by a lightly padded wall which is connected on three sides but is flexible enough to allow space-sharing between the areas. The laptop compartment is accessible from outside the bag through a full-length zipper that runs down the left side, as you’re wearing it. It will easily hold a 17” gaming laptop. Actually, anything smaller rattles around in the space. My 15” MacBook Pro Retina can almost fit in sideways. That’s my poor little 10.5″ iPad in there in the photo below.


On the opposite side of the divider is a single organizational slit pocket about 11” deep that would let you file a magazine, Dungeon Master’s Guide, full-sized keyboard, or tablet. (It’s directly below my fingers in the shot below.) In front of this is all the rest of the space in one large chamber. I use the Tom Bihn Freudian Slip for Medium Café bag for organization inside my bags, and this allows me to use this space well. A Cocoon Grid-it or another organizational tool would be a good investment. In addition, I have two other cases – one for dongles (2” x 3” x 8.5”) and one for my Apple Pencil and charger adapter along with a “real” pen (1” x 2.5” x 8”). I also put my hairbrush in here (8.5” x 1.5” x 1.5”). (Brush it while ya got it, right?) Across the top divider between the laptop sleeve and the main compartment is a headphone strap. This allows you to slip in a large set of headphones without them sinking to the bottom of the bag. The adjustable strap (5” long, doubled) is long enough to clip around really wide headphone bands, along with their cables. This keeps the cable untangled and the headphones from getting snarled into the detritus in the bottom of the bag. If you have a decent case for your headphones, it can hang there as well.

Moving up to the top of the bag is the gusseted rucksack roll-top closure. The two long pieces are reinforced with an internal flexible banding of some sort, and magnets are affixed at each end. This assures that the lip of the main compartment closes with a satisfyingly quiet thewp! You then can roll it down as many turns as you please and secure it with the single hook. Once hooked and cinched, I never had the closing slip or come undone in use. Also, it was very easy to pull the rear side of the clip up to relieve the pressure and unhook it.

On the outside of the bag, across the lower portion that faces out, is an angular silver and black pattern. (It’s reflective. See the shot further down in a darkened room with flash turned on.) On either side of this is a red rubber strip. The left strip is a weather-resistant zipper (detail below) that gives entry into a pocket that is about 75% the size of this entire rear panel. I can fit my 10.5 iPad in there and still have room for gloves, scarf, or a hat.

Across the very top of the graphic is a zipper that opens to reveal another weatherproofed pocket, which has a few organizational pockets added to the rear wall. There are 2 pen silos, a pocket that would hold a full deck of cards easily, and a netting pocket that would hold a gaming mouse or a wad of keys. Helpfully, there is a spring-loaded clip just above this to hold the ring to such a wad.

Moving around to the back of the pack, there is a 4” span haul loop sewn in the same seam as the strap for the main closure hook. It is made from rolled webbing and padding, and it’s comfortable to hold for any weight I was able to fill the bag with.

At this same level up the back is a slash pocket that runs the full width where you can stash the straps, should you wish. There is a snap closure on this, and the removal of the straps is a one-button click from each lower corner. Actually, you can unlock one lower strap, clip it into the opposite corner, and just stash away that other strap and make the bag a sling for either shoulder. The corner “ears” also have snap closures where the corner buckle can be hidden away when that strap is not in use. Across the center horizontally, sporting a silkscreened black-on-black MSI logo, is a trolley passthrough about 4.5” wide.

The straps themselves are 1.5” seatbelt-quality webbing, with pads stitched on after a few inches. The weight is borne by the pads, and there is an adjustable sternum strap, although it seemed to slide upwards during use, so it was always up to my chin after a few minutes. It did a good job of balancing the load, however. The adjustment buckles at the bottom of the strap kept their setting while being adjusted through changes in outerwear during a few weeks of Southern Winter, which ranged from full parka to shirt sleeves.

Above the corner strap connectors on each side is a hidden slash pocket, probably meant for drink bottles or small umbrellas. One is waterproofed.

What I Like

  • Weatherproof zippers and rain cover
  • Huge reflective design on back for safety
  • Dedicated headphone hanging strap

What needs to be improved

  • Little interior organization – maybe a panel insert?
  • Laptop compartment padding is a bit thin.

Final thoughts

As a commuting backpack, this is overkill, yet it can hold everything tightly and doesn’t look like it’s the voluminous pack it is. Carrying my personal iPad and 12” work laptop, headphones, plus my other personal gear rarely makes a dent in the total capacity of this bag. I could add a weekend’s worth of clothes into this, and it wouldn’t look any different. So, if you’re running away from home to join the circus, skipping out of town for a secret weekend, or just heading out to attend an eSports Con, this bag should – um – have your back. (Sorry.) The only thing I’d recommend for MSI is to maybe add a removable organizational panel for the main compartment. Even gamers need cables, USB sticks, sunglasses, and breath mints.

Price: $146.98
Where to buy: Amazon
Source: The sample of this product was provided by MSI.

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MSI Mystic Knight Gaming Backpack review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 5, 2019 at 9:00 am.

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Showers Pass Transit waterproof backpack review

 

REVIEW – The Showers Pass Transit waterproof backpack is a high-capacity backpack that is made with waterproof materials. It features a highly customizable design for a comfortable and secure fit and LED beacon lights for safety in the dark.  Read on to see what I think!

What is it?

The Showers Pass Transit waterproof backpack is a technical solution to the age-old question of how to protect the contents of a backpack from the elements. For years people have resorted to putting the contents of a backpack in waterproof containers inside the pack, covering the outside of the pack with a waterproof enclosure, or a combination of the two. The Transit backpack incorporates waterproof materials and construction into the design of the pack. The result is a backpack that should protect the contents no matter what you throw at it. Not only is the pack water resistant but it is comfortable to wear too. The pack design includes features for both daily use and more rigorous excursions.

What’s in the box?


Showers Pass Transit waterproof backpack
Beacon Lights

Design and features

Specifications

Weight: 4 lbs
Capacity: 42 Liters, 5511 in3
Waterproof Construction
Fits a 17” Laptop
360° 3M Reflective Trim
Beacon Light compatible

Unboxing

The Transit waterproof backpack is shipped in a box that is roughly 20″ x 14″ x 6″. The box is printed with the Showers Pass Mosaic Map (a custom mosaic of the world’s great cycling cities (Portland, New York, Washington DC, Paris, Barcelona, Amsterdam, London, Newcastle, Berlin, Sydney, and Taipei). The backpack only fits into the box with the base panel folded up and the sides folded in. In other words, The backpack has dimensions closer to a small suitcase.

Design of the Transit backpack

Water tightness

The water tightness of this backpack comes from 100% waterproof, fully welded construction with a single-side thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) waterproof coating on a rugged and durable 840-denier Nylon. The seams on the pack are all lap welded to ensure that no water penetrates the seam.

The bulk of the material is only waterproofed on one side. The one-sided construction permits the uncoated nylon side to dry out if it does get wet. Note that while this pack is waterproof, it isn’t necessarily submersible; the zipper on the main compartment is shielded from spray it may receive from rain but will leak if it is submerged. The zippers on the front and side of the back are watertight, with rubber gaskets that come together under compression when the zipper is closed. The tops of the zippers are protected from the rain by rubber boots.

Reinforcement stitching on the load lifters is also covered by the waterproof layer. Over the entire backpack there only appears to be three or four places where water could enter: the front compartment flap closure, the front compartment drain holes, the 3D mesh spacer stitching to the inside of the main compartment, and the main compartment zipper closure (with significant water exposure). Below is a picture of the front compartment drain holes taken when the pack is held upside down.

Over time, the TPU may also be compromised; there isn’t any reinforcement layer on the bottom and a seam or material failure here could be a route of entry if the pack is put down in a wet location.

Support

The 3D mesh spacer back panels wick moisture dry quickly and allow air circulation while the pack is worn. There is a flexible plastic stiffening panel mounted along the back internal to the backpack. The panel is not rigid but provides enough support to ensure the pack stays upright while being packed and gives it some shape when carrying bulky light objects. The height of the shoulder straps to the hip belt is about 18″ from the base of the hip belt to the apex of the shoulder strap and is not adjustable. This is acceptable for most American men but perhaps too big for smaller women (according to NASA). An adjustable width and height sternum strap spans the shoulder straps and includes an elastic section (if this elastic section is not stretched then the tension of the strap is perfect). It looks as if the strap can be slid along the rail that it fits into, but once it is connected it doesn’t budge.

The strap must be pulled off the rail it clips on to in order to open and close the strap.

I’d prefer another quick release for this strap since it seems like the strap or the rail will break over time. The hip strap is adjustable on each side and can be folded backward and secured against the front panel when not in use. The clasp on the belt mates with corresponding clasps on the rear of the pack. The belt is also completely removable because it is attached by velcro below the lumbar support. The belt has a couple of pockets on it and can be used as a standalone fanny pack (or whatever you call them in GB).

The previously mentioned load lifters have an elastic retention strap that ensures the pack doesn’t bounce too much. The pack has a removable plastic support along the bottom of the main compartment and a plastic support built into the rear. These supports allow the bag to stand upright when not worn (assuming it is not packed top heavy).

Compartments

The outside has a number of places to store items. The topside of the main compartment has a 7″ x 5″ fleece lined compartment. There is also a side pocket accessible from the outside that is not lined. The front pocket has side zippers and a stretchy mesh gusset on each side and it is designed to hold a bicycle helmet.

The hip belt has two zippered compartments, one with a key latch inside. Inside the main compartment is a fleece lined 17″ and 10″ computer/tablet sleeve. The compartments are secured about an inch from the base of the bag and the top can be closed with a velcro strap. There is a bottle pocket on the left and right of the inside.

The pack shows it’s cycling roots by not including a bottle pocket on the outside (because your water is mounted to the bike frame). On the inside front, there are two more generous bottle like pockets and another fleece-lined pocket.

There is also a ket latch on the inside of the main compartment.

Attachments

The Shoulder straps have elastic nylon straps at the apex which can be used to mount hardware normally supported by a belt clip. There are 5 nylon daisy-chain loops on either side of the sternum and an aluminum clip in the center loop of each side. Oversized compression straps on the left and the right can be used to carry larger items, such as a D lock/U lock.

Safety

Large stripes on the shoulders, the Showers Pass logo, and Showers Pass brand name on the rear are made with 3M reflective materials. The picture below was taken in a dark room with the light from behind the camera.

Grommets on the side compression straps and on the front pocket support Beacon Lights. These are small lightweight battery powered LEDs in a water-resistant enclosure. They operate in three modes: a low-frequency flash for a total of 1000 hrs per battery, a rapid flash for 500 hours per battery, and a constant illumination for 50 hours per battery.

The battery is a CR2032. The light will automatically turn off after 2 hours.

Performance

I used the pack to hold a variety of items. Filled with a computer and a few pages of notes, the material moved around a lot inside, even when the compressions straps on the side were closed as much as possible. When I put a bit more inside to stabilize it (a rather large lunchbox) the performance improved. Most of the weight of the pack was on my shoulders. This is acceptable for day-pack operation and if you have a fairly forgiving bicycle seat. When I added more weight I noticed that the non-adjustability of the strap to hip-belt distance. The belt was too high, and making the shoulder straps longer just caused the pack to fall away from my body. I had a hard time using the belt as a load support. Maybe the belt is just designed to limit sway, but it has the look and feel of a load supporting part of the pack.

The beacon lights were tested on the pack about 100 ft away at night and they do light up rather well. The video is blurry because there is nothing for the camera to focus on, but you can see from the video that they do provide a good visual indication at night. The setting was the longest interval (longest battery life) in the video and all 4 beacon lights were on.

The last test performed was a waterproof test. I filled the entire contents of the bag with paper towels. I used a pillow in a white cotton case to fill out some of the bulk of the bag. Then I put the bag in the shower and hit it from each side for 5 minutes. At the end of the experiment, I dried off the outside of the pack and inspected the paper towels. Everything was dry except the front pocket. Below you can see a picture of the paper towel and the inside of the pocket with a water drip towards the top left of the picture.

my guess is that when I placed the pack on the floor of the shower some water entered the drain holes.

What I like

  • Spacious
  • highly visible
  • water resistant
  • Unique cycling design

What needs to be improved

  • Expensive
  • Fit adjustments
  • Design of outer pocket

Final thoughts

The size of this pack is truly spacious and the water-resistant design should be appreciated by anyone who has ever been caught in the rain. There are other manufacturers of waterproof, even submersible, packs that have about as much storage for less cost.

Price: $264.00
Where to buy: ShowersPass and Amazon
Source: The sample for this review was provided by ShowersPass.

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Showers Pass Transit waterproof backpack review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on January 1, 2019 at 9:00 am.

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Go modular with Black Ember WPRT backpacks

NEWS – Even if I’m not hunting for new backpacks, they have a way of finding me. Black Ember’s newest release is called WPRT and is available in both a minimal and a modular version. I’m a sucker for modularity and really dig the way they’ve approached it here making it compatible with their earlier Citadel collection. From the clean lines and sturdy waterproof construction with rolltop to the fit adjustability and all the ways you can customize accessories this one is on my radar.

It’s on Kickstarter now and already fully funded. Campaign and early bird pricing will close on Dec. 29th if you’re interested. Should you pick one up, let me know what you think.

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Go modular with Black Ember WPRT backpacks originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on December 15, 2018 at 10:00 am.

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STM Myth 28 liter backpack review

REVIEW – Laptop backpacks are all the rage these days. With the rise of a younger, more tech-focused workforce, carrying a backpack, at least in tech circles, is no longer the mark of a lower echelon drone. At my publicly-traded technology company, directors and VPs carry backpacks into the office on a daily basis. My latest daily driver, the Myth 28-liter backpack from STM, fits in with any range of tech worker. I have really enjoyed testing it.

Note: Photos may be tapped or clicked for a larger image.

What is it?

The Myth is one of what STM calls their Laptop Backpacks. It’s primarily designed to be a pack, sure, but paying special attention to your large, flat screen and protecting it from harm is the primary purpose of this bag. The other features are all there as well, but the laptop compartment and the tablet sleeve are both “air-gapped” so that your device doesn’t get impacted if you drop the bag onto a floor from too high a distance.

Hardware specs

from company website

  • size 15″
  • main material: 100% polyester
  • outer dimensions: H 18.5 x W 11.8 x D 6.7 in (H 47.0 x W 30.0 x D 17.0  cm)
  • capacity: 28.0 L
  • weight: 2.69 lbs (1.2 kg)
  • Slingtech – the laptop never impacts the ground
  • CableReady – you can charge anything in-bag
  • Luggage pass-through – attach it to your luggage for easy portage when walking
  • ComfortCarry – mesh and padded back and straps for comfort
  • AirPod pocket offers quick, easy access to your wireless headphones
  • TPU coated webbing handles with rivets ensures durability
  • Water repellent C6DWR coating applied to fabric
  • Air channel back panel system promotes air flow, keeps you cool and comfortable
  • Reverse coil zippers protect teeth, keep moisture and grunge out
  • Internal fleece-lined sunglasses pocket
  • Weather-sealed laptop pocket

Design and features

The Myth design is a new one for STM. I’ve previously purchased several bags from them with personal funds and actually still have them in use. This new line is a departure in both materials and design. It’s less traditional “outdoor hiking pack with a laptop sleeve”, both in look and design. There are contrasting patterns of fabric used in unusual ways to provide a design flair. The colors are also from a less traditionally outdoorsy palette: pastels and subdued colors, rather than bright, in-your-face colors. I was sent the 28L Myth in a cream and reddish-grey fabric with maroon zippers and webbing. I think it looks very nice, but the Lovely Bride thinks is looks like a school sweatshirt. STM calls is “Windsor Wine.” Not sure what that should conjure up.

The back panel has two wide, padded pieces vertically with a wide space for your spine. The weight of the pack doesn’t hit your spine at all. The back pads and inner straps are covered in a nylon mesh fiber, not unlike breakaway football jersey material. Beneath this is closed-cell foam. The mesh wraps around the inside of the straps to provide cushioning around the neck. The outer surface of the straps is the same material as the pack itself – a smooth but slightly textured polyester. About 9” before the adjustment buckle is attached, there is a gliding sternum strap assembly. (Nice touch: there’s a doubled 2” piece of elastic stitched into a 2.5” section of the sternum strap. This means it is snug, but not death-grip-tight against your chest.) On the left strap, there is a fabric octagonal company logo the size of a quarter coin (€2 or £1 coins) that falls over your heart. The lower 9″ of the back has a pass-thru for your roll-aboard luggage handle. Where the straps connect at the top has a flexible yoke that cradles your neck. This lets you cinch it up tight without feeling it’s falling off the back, or you’re going to snap your iPad screen in two.

There are three zippered pockets accessed from the top, and a stash/water bottle pocket at each corner. The stash pockets have hooded covers over them, and a rear gusset, so the size can vary but the sleek line of the front doesn’t show it. The left-hand (as you wear it) stash pocket has a grommet-covered pass-through into the center zippered pocket. There are also grommeted holes in the upper wall between the other two compartments so that you can put a charger in your bag and connect anything within these four places. There are no straps or channels for the wiring, so the inside is going to resemble a suicide bomber’s vest, but you can have things charging while you’re on-the-go. (Well, there is a single safety-orange plastic wire clip sewn into the piping inside the center pocket just above the side pocket’s grommet. I only found it looking into the depths of the bag during the review. I’ve been carrying the bag for 2 months and never noticed it!)


The bottom pocket (if you lay the straps on the table) is for your laptop/tablets. There’s enough room for my MacBook Pro 15” and my iPad Pro 10.5”, and they are separated into their own cocoon. The tablet pocket can hold a 12.9” (original 2016) iPad, but the zipper won’t close with it in there. I don’t think the new model will be much better, but we’re still a week away from those being out as I write this. It may be reduced enough in size to fit. Below, with both a large and smaller iPad Pro, each has a pocket and they snuggle nicely together.


The top edge between the laptop pocket and the center pocket has the haul loop attached. This is listed as being TPU-coated for strength. There is a bit of a pattern that I can detect under the coating, which looks similar to the webbing on the straps, but I’m not sure. I don’t like the feel of this, but it is securely riveted into several layers of the main bag, so I don’t think it’ll fail easily.


The center pocket has organizer pockets on both sides. There is a mesh full-width one on the back side and an open-topped one below. The front side has a fleece-lined full-width pocked staggered down from that designed to hold glasses. The room at the bottom splays out into a space about 5” wide, so large headphones or cameras will fit here without issue. You could also toss in 3-4 bottles of wine or a couple of 2-liter bottles of soda. It’s surprisingly roomy. There is also a small pocket just on the other side of the left-hand outer stash pocket that could hold a power brick, umbrella, or another item you’d like to not have rambling around in the bottom of the bag. Maybe it could hold your rechargeable earbuds or your dongle case.


The outermost zippered pocket is next. There is only organization on the inner wall of this full-length space. There is a zippered envelope at the top (this would be opposite the sunglasses pocket) that would hold a passport, Moleskine (not the 5.5”x8.5”, but smaller ones would fit nicely) or a couple of CDs that you burned for your grandmother. Below this, there are pockets for cards, pens, flashlights, etc. They aren’t huge, but they have enough spare material to hold things up to maybe half an inch thick. I have a case for dongles that fits easily and only sticks out an inch or so. On the front wall, there is a single plastic tab with a stud and a hole near the end, so it loops up and can hold something about a half-inch in diameter. Like a rolled up set of earbuds. Or a charging cable that’s coming out of one of those grommets. Or your keys. It’s easy to access and keeps whatever you want right up at the top. (A mini-light so you can see into the depths of the bag?)


On the back is what I think of as this bag’s secret superpower: an open pocket that extends down the entire length and width. At 8”x 13”, it can hold a full-sized (original 9.5”) iPad, or your gym shoes, or an extra lens, or a mini-tripod, or a scarf after the ride heats up, or your gloves, or a decent-sized collapsible umbrella and raincoat. (In the picture below, I pulled my umbrella up to emphasize the pocket. It’s in the pocket in all other photos, it just doesn’t show.)
On the outside, there are two small hits of reflective striping at the bottom of the open pocket, and a stamped metal logo sewn into the top-right corner.

What I Like

  • Looks good – it’s not just another boring black backpack
  • Feels good – everything settles into your back nicely
  • Protective of my screens – no edges are exposed

What needs to be improved

  • Not a fan of the rubbery haul loop

Final thoughts

The Myth 28 liter comes close to being my perfect bag. I have been carrying this bag at least one day a week since I got it. I test other bags, but keep coming back to this one, because it feels nice, it’s a great size, and I like the pocket layout. Part of that is the front open pocket where I stash my “foul weather gear” – my poncho and umbrella. (Durham doesn’t get loads of rain all the time, but when we do, it can be intense. I’ve seen it drizzle for a week, and also pour down an inch in an hour after a dry day. Around here, you have to have fast access to waterproofing, or you’re going to be really wet, fast.) This pocket is rarely used for anything else, but I can have an umbrella out in seconds. Few other bags offer a similar size “quick-grab” pocket for an umbrella. And few others have such good organization, comfort, and enough room to carry everything without feeling like I’m on maneuvers. And none of them have looked this good while doing their thing.

Price: $135.95
Where to buy: STM Goods Website or Amazon.
Source: The sample of this product was provided by STM.

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STM Myth 28 liter backpack review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on November 9, 2018 at 9:00 am.

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The Bagsmart Xpedition Backpack works for all occasions – Notable crowdfunding campaign

What is it?

The Bagsmart Xpedition Backpack is an ergonomic backpack that utilizes a modular design to adapt to various daily needs with the use of swappable modules.

Why is it cool?

I like the Bagsmart backpack because it is well made and perfectly balanced to ensure that no matter what you are carrying, there is no fatigue or discomfort on your back. This backpack uses modular bags that clip on the inside of the backpack so that you can create multiple configurations that are interchangeable based on your needs for that time or day.

I received a pre-production sample of this bag, and I am quite impressed, The sample that I received included the following 7 modules for traveling, business and photography: 1 Sling Bag 0.4L, 1 Garment Bag 11L, 1 Wash Bag 3L, 1 Power Bag 1L, 1 Document Case 2L, 1 Camera Bag L 9L and 1 Camera Bag S 3L.

The modules fit perfectly, and can easily be pre-packed and then just swapped based on your needs. As a photographer, I find this to be a great bag for many types of shoots and the fact that it feels so comfortable really will help on those long photo shoot days. The backpack is also great for work and for excursions with my family and especially so when out with my kids and when I need to ensure that they have the necessary supplies.

Where can I find more info?

The Bagsmart Xpedition Backpack campaign ends on 12/21/18 and they are working towards their funding goal of $6,000. You can pre-order a Bagsmart Xpedition Backpack starting at $149. After the Bagsmart Xpedition Backpack campaign ends, rewards are estimated to start shipping in January 2019. Visit their Kickstarter page for all the details.

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The Bagsmart Xpedition Backpack works for all occasions – Notable crowdfunding campaign originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on November 6, 2018 at 1:41 pm.

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