Prime Day 2026 is live, and for once the gaming accessory deals are actually worth your time. Seven products across monitors, controllers, headsets, keyboards, and mice have dropped to prices that are hard to ignore, especially if any of these have been collecting dust on your wishlist.
Here's the lowdown: not every Prime Day discount is what it appears. A lot of products get artificially inflated list prices so the "discount" looks bigger than it is. The picks below are different. These are products with established retail histories where the price drop is real, and the hardware itself holds up.

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The display upgrade that makes the most sense right now
The Sceptre C415B-UUS360 is the kind of deal that justifies checking Prime Day in the first place. A 40-inch curved monitor at $499.97 (down from $599.97) already sounds reasonable, but the dual-mode setup is what makes it genuinely interesting. You get 5120 x 2160 at 180Hz for single-player immersion, or you can drop to 2560 x 1080 at 360Hz when you need every frame in competitive play. Most monitors this size sit comfortably above $600 without offering that kind of flexibility. The VA panel is not ideal if you do color-accurate design work, but for gaming it gets the job done.
Controllers worth upgrading to
Two controllers stand out this year, and they target very different budgets.
The Razer Raiju V3 Pro drops to $147.24 from $219.99, which finally puts it in the same conversation as other premium pro controllers. The TMR thumbsticks are the headline feature here, designed to resist drift over time rather than just performing well out of the box. Add programmable back buttons and strong wireless performance, and this is a serious option for PS5 and PC players who want more control over their setup.
For players who want pro-level features without the premium price, the 8BitDo Ultimate 2 at $43.59 (down from $64.99) is the value pick of the entire sale. TMR thumbsticks, a bundled charging dock, and broad multi-platform support across PC, handheld gaming devices, and mobile make it hard to beat at this price. The WUCHANG: Fallen Feathers Special Edition variant is also discounted alongside the standard color options, which is a nice bonus if you want something that looks different on your desk.
For more ways to save on gaming gear and in-game content, the gaming guides hub is worth bookmarking.
Headsets: one for competitive players, one for everyone else
The Razer BlackShark V3 Pro hits $170.99 from $249.99. Active noise cancellation, a detachable high-quality microphone, and comfortable ear cushions for long sessions make it a strong pick for competitive players who rely on clear team communication. The $79 discount is meaningful for a recently launched headset that has not had much time to drop in price organically.
The SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless at $249.99 (down from $379.99) is the premium option and still one of the most complete headsets on the market. The hot-swappable battery system is the feature that separates it from the competition. You never have to stop playing to recharge because you just swap the battery out. Combined with a base station that makes switching between Xbox, PC, and other platforms effortless, and active noise cancellation that actually works, the $130 discount makes this Prime Day one of the better opportunities to finally pull the trigger on it.
Keyboards and mice rounding out the setup
The Logitech G413 TKL SE at $44.17 (down from $79.99) is the kind of keyboard upgrade that makes sense for anyone still on a membrane board. Mechanical switches, PBT keycaps, aluminum top plate, and a compact tenkeyless layout that frees up mouse space. The white-only backlighting is a limitation if RGB matters to you, but for pure typing and gaming feel at under $50, this is a strong entry-level mechanical option.
The Logitech G PRO 2 Lightspeed drops to $85.49 from $149.99, and that is where it gets interesting. The G Pro X Superlight 2 may be Logitech's current flagship esports mouse, but the G PRO 2 still runs the same reliable HERO sensor and Lightspeed wireless technology that competitive players have trusted for years. For ranked play and competitive shooters, paying $85 for proven esports-grade hardware instead of $150+ for the newest model is genuinely the smarter move for most players.
What this means for gamers is simple: these discounts are live now, and Prime Day windows close fast. If you have been putting off a setup upgrade, the Sceptre monitor offers the biggest single visual improvement, the 8BitDo Ultimate 2 is the easiest recommendation for anyone on a budget, and the Arctis Nova Pro Wireless remains the headset to beat at its price point. Check our latest game reviews if you are also looking to pair new hardware with something worth playing on it.








