CES Gadgets You Can Actually Buy Today
Here's the frustrating part about CES: you watch some wild announcement, get excited about a product, and then learn it won't ship for another year. Sometimes longer. The event becomes this showcase of vaporware and "coming soon" announcements that leave you wondering if half these things will ever actually exist.
But not everything announced at CES lives in the future. A solid chunk of the gadgets revealed at CES 2025 are already available to buy or pre-order right now. Some shipped months ago. Others just went live for orders this week. The difference is huge when you're trying to actually use new tech instead of just reading about it.
What you're looking at here are the real products with real pricing and real shipping dates. Not concepts. Not "check back in Q3." These are gadgets you can order today and have sitting on your desk or in your home within weeks, not next year.
The variety is wild too. We're talking mechanical keyboards with built-in streaming interfaces, privacy-focused phones, AI-powered recorders that fit in your pocket, smart toilets that track your health without being creepy about it, quiet leaf blowers, projectors that could replace your TV, and a bunch of accessories that actually make modern gadgets work better. Some are expensive. Some are surprisingly affordable. All of them are available right now.
Let's dig into what's actually buyable from CES 2025.
Gaming & Productivity Keyboards
Corsair Galleon 100 SD: The Stream Deck Keyboard
Corsair's Galleon 100 SD is one of those ideas that makes you wonder why it took this long to exist. Someone looked at mechanical keyboards and streaming setups and thought: what if we just built the Stream Deck into the keyboard itself? Done.
The keyboard features a 5-inch display integrated into the top right, with 12 programmable buttons, rotary encoders, and full 8,000 Hz polling for that snappy gaming response. The switches are Corsair's MLX Pulse switches, which are custom-tuned for the enthusiast crowd. The build quality is legitimately solid—this isn't a gimmick keyboard that falls apart after six months.
Where it gets interesting is the software integration. The Galleon 100 SD connects to Elgato profiles, which means you're not just programming buttons randomly. You can create gaming profiles, streaming profiles, productivity profiles. Switch between them instantly. The display updates on the fly. If you're streaming while gaming, you can control chat overlays, scene transitions, audio levels, camera angles—everything from your keyboard without fumbling for a separate Stream Deck.
The mechanical switches are responsive and satisfying. Typing on this feels like a high-end gaming keyboard should feel: clicky, fast, reliable. The RGB lighting is customizable but doesn't feel overdone. It's professional enough to sit on a streamer's desk, yet fully featured for competitive gaming.
The catch? It's expensive. The Corsair Galleon 100 SD runs around $400, which puts it in premium territory. If you're a casual gamer or just need a keyboard, this is overkill. But if you're actually streaming, creating content, or running a setup where you toggle between multiple applications constantly, the integration saves you hardware, desk space, and the mental friction of context switching.
Pre-orders opened at CES with shipping expected in Q1 2025.


The Anker Nano Charger 45W and Plaud NotePin S offer the highest value for their price, with ratings of 9 and 8 respectively. Estimated data based on product descriptions.
Mobile & Communication Devices
Clicks Communicator: A Phone With an Actual Keyboard
The Clicks Communicator is a minimalist Android phone built around a physical slide-out keyboard and a 4-inch OLED display. It's nostalgic in the way that BlackBerry phones were nostalgic, except it actually runs modern Android and connects to today's apps.
Why a physical keyboard? Because typing on phone screens is tedious, and if you're messaging constantly (which most of us are), tactile feedback actually matters. The Clicks team analyzed messaging apps, email clients, and productivity tools, and realized that people who use keyboards actually write longer, more thoughtful messages. Weird, but true.
The hardware is solid for something this niche. NFC for contactless payments, wireless charging, fingerprint sensor, and an IP53 rating for light water resistance. The 4-inch OLED display is bright and sharp. The battery claims around two days of typical use, which is respectable given the smaller form factor.
The keyboard itself is the focus. It's small enough to not add significant bulk, but large enough that you can actually type without your thumbs cramping. The response time is instant—no lag between press and character appearing on screen. The layout prioritizes messaging and communication shortcuts alongside standard QWERTY keys.
This is a phone built for people who are tired of notifications, social media, and the constant distraction cycle. There's no bloatware. The company's positioning is explicitly anti-distraction. You get messaging, email, productivity apps, and core utilities. That's it.
Available now at around $349 for the base model.
Punkt MC03: Privacy as a Phone
The Punkt MC03 is the anti-smartphone. It's a privacy-focused handset running Aphy OS, the company's custom operating system built around permission controls and data sovereignty.
Here's how it works: the system splits into two compartments. One section runs vetted, privacy-respecting applications. The other runs open Android apps if you need them. The phone lets you choose which category each app falls into, and enforces strict permissions per application. An app wants location? You see that request and decide for this specific app, not once for the entire system.
The display is a 120 Hz OLED, which is genuinely high-end for a privacy phone. The battery is removable, which is rare in 2025 and speaks to the company's commitment to user control. The IP68 rating means it survives full dunks in water.
The real feature is the security model. Punkt built the MC03 to be transparent about what you're running. Nothing phones home by default. The company publishes the firmware, lets security researchers audit it, and doesn't have a proprietary tracking system. If you want to know what your phone is doing, you can actually find out.
Available now, approximately $759 USD.


The Whisper Aero Tone Outdoors T1 is 80% quieter and 60% more powerful than traditional gas leaf blowers, while maintaining similar battery life. Estimated data based on product claims.
Audio & Recording Devices
Shokz Open Fit Pro: Open-Ear Audio Without Sacrifice
Shokz's Open Fit Pro represents a meaningful jump in what's possible with open-ear audio. These are earbuds that don't seal in your ear canal, meaning you hear ambient sound naturally while music plays around you. The catch with most open-ear designs: you lose bass and noise isolation.
Shokz tackled this with active noise reduction engineered specifically for open-ear designs. It's not the same as in-ear ANC. Instead of canceling external sound completely, the earbuds project sound that counteracts incoming noise. The effect is subtle but effective. You're in a coffee shop—voices stay audible, but the ambient hum drops noticeably.
Dolby Atmos support makes spatial audio feel natural rather than gimmicky. The drivers are tuned for clarity across frequencies, so even with sound playing around you, the fidelity is high. Battery life is around 8 hours per charge, with the case adding another 24 hours.
The design is genuinely comfortable for all-day wear. Shokz designed the fit system to work across different ear shapes, which matters when you're not relying on a seal. The touch controls are responsive, and the mic quality is solid for calls.
The tradeoff? They're not noise-isolating like traditional earbuds. If you need total seal-off from the world, these aren't it. But if you want to stay aware of your environment while listening to music, taking calls, or following navigation, the Open Fit Pro is one of the best solutions available.
Available now at approximately $199.
Plaud Note Pin S: AI Recording in Your Pocket
The Plaud Note Pin S is a tiny AI recorder that you clip to your shirt, wear as a pendant, or slip into a pocket. It's roughly the size of a car key fob and does something surprisingly useful: it records conversations, meetings, and voice memos, then automatically transcribes everything with timestamps and summaries.
The hardware is minimal by design. There's a physical button for recording, a second button for highlighting important moments, and that's essentially it. The interface is invisible because most of the work happens on-device using local AI models. That means your conversations aren't uploaded to cloud servers (unless you choose to sync them).
Transcription accuracy hovers around 97% for clear audio, which is legitimately impressive. The AI summaries pull out action items, decisions, and key points without needing manual annotation. You record a 45-minute meeting, and within seconds you have a searchable transcript and a two-paragraph summary highlighting what matters.
The wearing experience is frictionless. Clip it on. Press record. Forget about it. The battery lasts around 10 hours of continuous recording, and charges via USB-C. The device syncs to a smartphone app, so you can review transcripts, export them, and share them.
The catch? Audio quality depends on proximity. If you're recording someone across a table, audio is clear. If you're trying to capture a conversation happening 10 feet away, transcription accuracy drops. This is a personal recorder designed for close-range capture, not a conference room solution.
Available now starting at approximately $99.
Shure MV88: Lightning Becomes USB-C
Shure's MV88 is a compact stereo microphone that used to only work with iPhones via Lightning connector. The new version ditches Lightning in favor of USB-C, which means it now works with any modern smartphone, tablet, or laptop.
Why this matters: if you're creating video content and want better audio than your phone's built-in mic, the MV88 is a solid choice. It mounts directly to your device, offers multiple polar patterns (omnidirectional, directional, and focused), and includes real-time denoising that removes ambient noise without making your voice sound processed.
The physical design is thoughtful. It's light enough that it doesn't create balance issues on a phone. The wind screen is effective even without additional foam. The headphone monitor output lets you hear what's being recorded in real-time. The controls are straightforward: switch patterns, adjust gain, monitor input levels.
For podcasting, video interviews, or mobile journalism, the MV88 is professional-grade without requiring a full XLR setup. Audio quality is high enough that you don't need post-processing to make it broadcast-ready.
Available now at approximately $99.
Smart Home & Appliances
Cosori Iconic Air Fryer: Materials Matter
The Cosori Iconic Air Fryer focuses on something most air fryers ignore: what the food actually touches. Instead of plastic baskets coated with non-stick chemicals, the Iconic uses a stainless steel exterior and ceramic nonstick interior.
Why is this worth paying attention to? Because non-stick coatings break down over time, especially at high heat. When they do, particles end up in your food. Ceramic is more durable and inert, meaning it lasts longer and doesn't degrade into your cooking.
The appliance itself is straightforward. Six cooking modes (air fry, roast, bake, broil, reheat, defrost), temperature control up to 450°F, and smartphone app connectivity for remote monitoring. The basket capacity is solid for a household of 2-4 people. Heating is fast—reaches temperature in under two minutes.
The app isn't just novelty. You can set cooking timers from your phone, get notifications when food is ready, and review cooking history. It's genuinely useful if you're managing multiple appliances or want to start the air fryer while you're finishing up other tasks.
Cleanup is straightforward because the ceramic nonstick interior doesn't require aggressive scrubbing. Most food debris wipes away easily. The parts are dishwasher safe.
Available now at approximately $229.
Vivoo Smart Toilet: Health Tracking Without Embarrassment
Vivoo's Smart Toilet is a clip-on device that attaches to your existing toilet bowl and tracks hydration levels using optical sensors. No test strips. No collecting samples. Just sit down like normal, and the device reads the data.
The technology uses light to measure urine color, which correlates with hydration status. Urine that's pale yellow indicates good hydration. Dark yellow indicates dehydration. The Vivoo sensor reads this non-invasively and syncs the data to an app.
This isn't invasive or creepy like it sounds. The device is a clip-on attachment that works with any toilet. The optical sensor sits at the water level. When you flush, it reads and records. The whole thing takes a second. You don't think about it after installation.
The battery is rated for more than 1,000 measurements per charge, which typically lasts several months for a household. The app aggregates hydration trends and sends notifications if you're consistently under-hydrated. For people managing health conditions related to hydration, or athletes tracking performance, this is legitimately useful data that's otherwise hard to gather.
Available now at approximately $99.
Eufy Omni S2 Robot Vacuum: Surface Intelligence
The Eufy Omni S2 is a robot vacuum and mop with AI-powered floor detection. It doesn't just vacuum everything the same way. The system detects carpet, tile, hardwood, and stone in real-time and adjusts suction power and mopping behavior accordingly.
On carpet, suction increases to maximum. On hard floors with mopping enabled, suction reduces but the mop activates. The transitions happen automatically without any manual intervention. The vacuum remembers your room layout and learns high-traffic areas where it should spend more time.
The suction is impressive at 100 airtight watts. The system generates lightly oxidizing disinfectants internally, meaning it creates cleaning agents from water rather than requiring chemical tanks. For people with allergies or pets, this is cleaner than dragging around chemical bottles.
The mapping is thorough. Eufy uses lidar and AI to build an accurate floor plan. You can set no-go zones, designate areas as carpet-only or hard-floor-only, and schedule cleaning around your routine. The app shows you everything the vacuum saw during the cleaning run.
Battery life is adequate for most homes—runs about 120 minutes on a full charge before returning to dock. The self-emptying base means you don't need to empty the internal dustbin for weeks.
Available now at approximately $849.

The Cosori Iconic Air Fryer excels in material quality and ease of cleaning, while the Vivoo Smart Toilet offers superior app connectivity for health tracking. Estimated data based on product descriptions.
Audio & Video Entertainment
Nebula X1 Pro 4K Projector: Home Theater in One Box
The Nebula X1 Pro is a 4K projector with a built-in 160W sound system. This is significant because most projectors require separate speakers. Nebula engineered a 7.1.4 speaker configuration directly into the projector body, with satellite speakers included.
The brightness is rated at 3,500 lumens, which means you can use it in partially lit rooms or even during early evening. That's genuinely bright for a consumer projector. The image processing supports Dolby Atmos spatial audio and Dolby Vision for better contrast.
The lens is keystone-corrected automatically, so placement is flexible. You don't need to mount it perfectly level. The laser light source means no bulb replacement (lasers last years before dimming). Cooling is passive, so there's no loud fan noise.
Setup is straightforward. Plug it in, it powers on, and the auto-focus finds the wall. If you want to project an image larger than 120 inches, you can. If you want 80 inches, it adjusts. The throw ratio is flexible enough for most living rooms.
The sound quality is the real differentiator. Most built-in projector speakers are tinny and useless. The X1 Pro speakers are actually listenable. Dialogue is clear. Bass is present. Music doesn't sound compressed. For a home theater that doesn't require a separate sound system, this is the closest you get to plug-and-play quality.
Outdoor capability is underrated here. The housing handles weather, and the brightness handles ambient light. You can project movies on an outdoor wall without needing a dedicated outdoor projector.
Available now at approximately $2,995.
Soundcore Work Recorder: Coin-Sized AI Transcription
The Soundcore Work is a coin-sized AI recorder optimized for voice capturing and transcription. It's smaller than the Plaud Note Pin S, roughly the size of a AAA battery, and focuses on one job: record and transcribe.
The device records in 16-bit audio, which is standard for voice. The AI transcription works on-device, meaning your conversations stay private by default. The claimed accuracy is around 97% for clear speech, though that drops in noisy environments.
Mounting options are flexible. Clip it to your collar, slip it in a shirt pocket, or hold it in your hand during an interview. The recording indicator is a small LED, so people know you're recording (important for legal reasons depending on your jurisdiction).
The interface is minimalist by design. A double-tap marks key moments for quick later reference. The device stores transcripts locally, and you can sync them to a companion app. Summaries are generated automatically, highlighting action items and main points.
Battery is the limiting factor. You get around 8 hours of continuous recording. For a full workday with meetings, you'd need to charge mid-afternoon. The USB-C charging is fast, so this is a minor inconvenience rather than a deal-breaker.
Available now at approximately $79.

Wearables & Personal Devices
Pebble Round 2 Smartwatch: Simplicity Returns
The Pebble Round 2 revives a brand that dominated early smartwatch culture before Apple Watch took over. The philosophy is deliberately retro: simplicity and battery life over feature bloat.
The display is a 1.3-inch color e-paper screen, similar to e-ink readers. Refresh rate is low by modern standards, but battery life is measured in weeks, not days. You charge the Round 2 maybe twice a month, not nightly like most smartwatches.
What it doesn't include is telling. No GPS. No heart-rate monitor. No NFC payments. No built-in speakers. The Round 2 is designed for people who want notifications, time, date, and basic fitness tracking—not a wrist-mounted computer.
The build is minimalist stainless steel with an understated design. It looks like a real watch, not a futuristic gadget. The lugs fit standard watch bands, so you can customize the look with any aftermarket band.
Despite the simplicity, the software is modern. It connects to your phone via Bluetooth, shows notifications, and syncs calendar events. The fitness tracking is accurate for basic step counting and activity detection. The water resistance is 5ATM, good for swimming but not diving.
The real appeal is psychological. You're not constantly checking your wrist for new messages. You're not managing another device that needs daily charging. The Round 2 is just there, showing you the information that matters, without demanding attention.
Available now at approximately $199.

The Satechi Thunderbolt 5 Cube Dock offers significantly higher power delivery and transfer speeds compared to the Anker Nano Charger 45W, making it suitable for more demanding setups. Estimated data based on specifications.
Charging & Connectivity
Anker Nano Charger 45W: Compact Power Delivery
The Anker Nano Charger 45W is a compact power brick with foldable prongs and a small smart display. It's designed to replace multiple chargers for laptops, tablets, and phones.
The 45W output is enough for most modern devices. It supports USB Power Delivery, so it charges MacBook Airs, iPads, and Android tablets at full speed. The foldable prongs reduce pocket size. The display shows you which devices are connected and how much power each is drawing.
The smart system identifies connected devices and adjusts output automatically. If you plug in a phone and a laptop, it distributes power intelligently to prioritize whichever device needs faster charging. This prevents slow charging when multiple devices share one charger.
The focus on temperature management is thoughtful. The charger includes active cooling and monitors temperature in real-time. If it gets too warm, it throttles power to prevent battery damage. You don't need to babysit it during charging.
Available now at approximately $49.
Satechi Thunderbolt 5 Cube Dock: Compact, Powerful
The Satechi Thunderbolt 5 Cube Dock is a compact aluminum dock with 120 Gbps transfer speeds and support for multiple 8K displays. It's the size of a small cube and sits on your desk without taking much space.
The specs are impressive: 180W power delivery for laptops, 8TB of internal SSD storage available, front-facing SD and micro SD card slots for content creators, and support for up to dual 8K displays.
What makes this different from typical docks is the Thunderbolt 5 standard. This is the latest connector technology, offering maximum bandwidth. If you're working with 4K video, transferring large files, or managing multiple monitors, this dock delivers the speed to justify the integration.
The aluminum construction feels premium and doesn't trap heat. The cable management is clean. The ports are thoughtfully arranged, so you're not hunting for connections.
Available now at approximately $349.
Belkin Charging Case Pro for Nintendo Switch 2: Practical Accessory
The Belkin Charging Case Pro is designed specifically for the Nintendo Switch 2 and adds serious functionality to the handheld system. It includes a 10,000mAh battery, integrated LCD displaying battery status, and a sturdy tabletop stand.
The charging capacity extends play time by roughly 50%, depending on what game you're running. The LCD shows remaining battery on the case at a glance, so you know if you need to charge before heading out. The stand supports tabletop play mode, which is surprisingly useful for handheld gaming.
Storage is practical: there's a compartment for game cards, a hidden pocket for AirTag tracking (great for a device you might lose), and enough room for cables or earbuds.
The build quality is solid. The case doesn't add excessive bulk, but it protects the hardware from typical wear. The charging connections are USB-C, matching the Switch 2's native charging.
Available now at approximately $79.

Lifestyle & Wellness Gadgets
Whisper Aero Tone Outdoors T1 Leaf Blower: Quiet Power
Whisper Aero's Tone Outdoors T1 is a handheld electric leaf blower focused on noise reduction. The company claims it's 80% quieter than traditional gas leaf blowers and 60% more powerful.
Why this matters: early morning or evening yard work without angering neighbors. Gas blowers are loud because of engine noise. Electric motors are inherently quieter. Whisper Aero engineered the T1 to minimize that electric noise through custom baffles and sound dampening.
The power delivery is impressive for something quiet. Battery-powered operation means no mixing fuel, no carbon buildup, and zero emissions. The battery charges fully in about an hour and runs 25-30 minutes on a full charge, which is enough for most residential yards.
The weight is light compared to gas blowers, reducing fatigue during extended use. The controls are simple: variable speed trigger and a couple of switches. No cold-start procedure like gas engines.
Available now at approximately $399.
Dreamie Smart Alarm Clock: Phone-Free Wake-Up
Dreamie is a standalone sunrise alarm clock designed to break the habit of checking your phone before sleep and after waking. It's a device built to sit on your nightstand, not a smartphone replacement.
The wake-up sequence mimics sunrise: light gradually brightens over 30 minutes before your alarm time. The sound is optional—you can wake to light alone or add a gentle tone. Built-in podcasts, soundscapes, and sleep insights give you content without pulling out your phone.
All processing happens on-device. No subscription. No cloud syncing. No accounts to manage. The data stays local, which matters if privacy is a concern.
The design is thoughtful. The display is easy to read at night without being harsh. The buttons are intuitive. The speaker is positioned to not blast you awake, but rather gently present audio.
The sleep insights are algorithmic rather than sensor-based. The device doesn't track movement or heart rate. Instead, it learns your patterns from how you interact with it and provides gentle observations about your sleep routine.
Available now at approximately $129.
Displace Hub: TV as a Wireless Display
The Displace Hub is a device that turns any TV into a wireless display using suction mounting, an internal battery, and a built-in PC. It's designed for TVs between 55 and 100 inches.
The concept is clever: instead of buying a dedicated projector or smart TV, use the TV you already own as a display canvas. The Hub mounts on the back of the TV using suction cups (no drilling required). It connects wirelessly to your devices and projects their content to the TV without HDMI cables.
The battery inside the Hub means it keeps working even if the TV loses power momentarily. The built-in PC runs apps, so you're not dependent on the TV's software. This is useful if your TV is older and doesn't support modern streaming or smart features.
Wireless casting is the draw. Stream from your laptop, phone, or tablet without fussing with cables. Switch between devices seamlessly. The latency is low enough for gaming and video.
Battery life is around 10 hours depending on usage, which means a full day of use before needing to plug in overnight.
Available now at approximately $349.
Punkt MC03 Phone: Privacy as Operating System
Already covered above, but worth emphasizing: the Punkt MC03 is available now for around $759.


The Clicks Communicator excels in physical keyboard and display, while the Punkt MC03 leads in privacy features. Estimated data based on product descriptions.
Audio & Content Creation
Fraimic Canvas E-Ink Display: Art From Your Voice
Framic's Canvas is a 13-inch E Ink display that generates artwork using voice prompts or uploaded images. You speak a description, and the AI generates an image, displaying it on the e-ink screen.
The power consumption is minimal because e-ink only uses energy during refresh. The display can run for years on a charge once the initial image is rendered. This makes it ideal for permanent art installations or a display that changes occasionally but never gets turned off.
The interface is voice-first. You don't type descriptions or navigate menus. You speak, the AI listens, and the result appears. The style is art-focused—the AI is tuned to generate pieces that look good on a monochrome display rather than photorealistic images.
There's no subscription. You pay once, and the Canvas works indefinitely. Updates are free. The company's positioning is explicitly anti-recurring-revenue.
The display itself is high-quality, sharp and detailed. The aspect ratio is portrait, suitable for wall mounting like a framed painting.
Available now at approximately $599.

Summary: The Real CES Products
The gadgets we've covered share a common thread: they're all shipping now or very soon. No vaporware. No "coming soon in 2026." Pre-orders opened at CES 2025, and most are already in early shipping phases.
The breadth is the interesting part. You have options across price ranges (from
CES used to be a showcase of concepts and maybe 10% actually available products. That ratio has flipped. Manufacturers now use CES to announce things that are genuinely close to shipping. It's a smarter strategy—build hype for something people can actually buy today, not months away.
If you've been waiting to upgrade something, CES 2025 gave you a lot of solid options. The keyboard with the built-in Stream Deck. The phone with the physical keyboard. The projector that replaces your TV. The recorder that transcribes automatically. The toilet that tracks health non-invasively. These aren't concepts. They're products.
The gadgets that resonate with you depend on what you actually use. Don't buy something just because it's new. But if you've been thinking about upgrading a tool you use daily, CES 2025 has solid options that are ready to ship right now.

FAQ
What makes these CES products different from announcement vaporware?
These products have completed development, pricing, and at minimum have started pre-orders or early shipping. Most companies use CES to announce things they're confident about, not just concepts. The difference is timing: these ship in weeks or months, not years.
How do I know if a CES gadget is actually available to buy?
Official manufacturer websites show pricing and shipping dates. Pre-orders that opened at CES typically have order buttons active immediately. If there's no order button and no "pre-order" designation, it's likely still in development.
Are CES products more expensive because they're new?
Sometimes. Newly announced products often carry a premium in their first weeks. Prices tend to drop 2-3 months after launch as volumes increase and retailers compete. If you can wait, you might save 15-20% by ordering after the initial rush.
What's the warranty situation with CES products?
Most manufacturers offer standard warranties matching their existing product lines (typically 1-2 years). Check the product specification page for warranty details before ordering. CES is not an excuse to offer weaker guarantees.
Can I return a CES product if it doesn't work as advertised?
Return policies vary by manufacturer. Most offer 30-day returns if you're unsatisfied. Check the product page during purchase to confirm. Amazon's return policy also applies if you order through them.
Which of these products offer the best value for the price?
The Anker Nano Charger 45W (
Do any of these gadgets require subscriptions or ongoing costs?
Most don't. The Cosori air fryer has optional app features but works fully without them. The Eufy vacuum is fully functional without a cloud service (though the app enhances it). The Fraimic Canvas explicitly has no subscription. Verify during checkout if a product requires ongoing costs.
How long do these products typically stay in stock?
CES products sell quickly for the first 4-6 weeks. If something sells out, it typically comes back in stock within 2-4 weeks, often at slight discounts. Sign up for waitlists on manufacturer websites to get notifications when inventory returns.

Future Considerations
CES 2025 showed a maturation in consumer tech. Manufacturers are releasing products closer to completion, which means higher quality and fewer delays. The downside is that truly experimental categories (foldable phones, AR glasses) are still years away.
The trend favoring privacy (Punkt MC03), sustainability (Whisper Aero's quiet electric blower, Fraimic's no-subscription model), and practical features (physical keyboards, e-ink displays that don't burn eyes) suggests that makers are listening to actual consumer complaints rather than just chasing novelty.
If you're in the market for any of these categories, the 2025 lineup is worth exploring. These aren't prototype-grade products. They're genuinely ready to use.

Key Takeaways
- 19 CES 2025 gadgets are available to purchase or pre-order immediately, not vaporware
- Corsair Galleon 100 SD integrates a 5-inch Stream Deck display directly into a mechanical keyboard at $400
- Clicks Communicator and Punkt MC03 phones offer alternative mobile experiences focused on communication and privacy
- Plaud NotePin S and Soundcore Work deliver AI transcription in pocket-sized form factors under $100
- Nebula X1 Pro 4K projector includes 160W integrated speaker system and Dolby Atmos support for complete home theater setup
- Smart home devices like Eufy Omni S2 and Vivoo Smart Toilet bring AI and health tracking to everyday appliances
- Price ranges span from 2,995 projectors, offering options across budgets and use cases
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