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Anker Laptop Power Bank, 25,000mah Portable Charger
Game Reviews

Anker’s 25,000mAh Laptop Power Bank Drops Below Prime Day Pricing for Labor Day, Game Freely Without Outlets

by admin August 31, 2025


Maybe someone challenged Anker to see just how much power and potential they could pack into a portable charger that’s only 6 inches long and weighs a scant 1.3 pounds. There’s really no other logical explanation for the Anker Laptop Power Bank, a 25,000mAh universally compatible behemoth with that can charge up to 4 devices at a time.

Could this be the best portable charging device of all? Four-device capabilty, two built-in cables including one that doubles as a carrying strap, able to charge an M3 MacBook Air from zero to 50% in just 21 minutes, and the winner of an iF Design Award and a Red Dot Design Award in 2025? Finding out for yourself has never been easier now that Amazon’s running a limited-time 30%-off deal that drops the Anker Laptop Power Bank to just $94.

See at Amazon

Charges Everything, Fast

The Anker Laptop Power Bank can charge four devices in total, and even with three devices connected for some juice — including a laptop — all three get up to 100W at the same time. Two of the three USB-C ports have dedicated built-in cables, thus eliminating that mad scramble to find one when you’re on the go or in a hurry. One of those built-in USB-C cables extends up to 2.3 feet and can retract back into the body of the Power Bank, while the other doubles as a carrying strap. That’s a lot of cable-bending, so it’s good that Anker has built both cables to endure over 20,000 bends and retractions.

It doesn’t matter which device you’re looking to charge — the Anker Laptop Power Bank works with Mac and Windows laptops, smartphones, tablets, and wireless earbuds and headphones from Apple, Samsung, Google, or any brand that’s USB-C compatible, and also Steam Decks and other handheld gaming consoles. The fourth port is USB-A, so older devices aren’t getting left out.

See It Work

The hi-res real-time display screen at the front of the Anker Laptop Power Bank gives you all the information you could possibly need, including the output and input wattage for all four ports, remaining charge time, and the temperature and health of the Laptop Power Bank itself. The Laptop Power Bank takes its own temperature and those of the devices it’s connected to 3 million times per day, basically eliminating any chance of an excessive-heat-related failure. It’s TSA approved, so it’s the ultimate travel accessory to keep all of your devices up and running.

There’s a very solid case to be made that the Anker Laptop Power Bank is indeed the very best portable charger on the market. The combination of compact size, power output, number of devices it can charge, built-in cables, and safety measures is unparalleled, and now during Amazon’s limited-time 30% off deal, so is the $94 price.

See at Amazon



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August 31, 2025 0 comments
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EcoFlow’s Rapid power bank is the fastest yet
Product Reviews

EcoFlow’s Rapid power bank is the fastest yet

by admin August 25, 2025


It’s now possible to charge a large 99Wh (27,650mAh) power bank — the largest you can easily take on an airplane — from zero to 80 percent in about 20 minutes. But only if you own EcoFlow’s new power bank and desktop charger combo, launching in the US today.

The $179.99 / €169.99 Rapid Pro Power Bank 27k can take a powerful 320W charge when placed onto the pogo-pin connector on top of the company’s $199.99 / €159.99 Rapid Pro Desktop Charger. Both devices can simultaneously charge two power-hungry laptops at up to 140W each over USB-C, and you can plug two 140W USB-C PD 3.1 chargers into the power bank to charge its battery from zero to 80 percent in less than 30 minutes.

You can even monitor progress over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth from the EcoFlow app on your phone while packing for the airport, and the portable battery should be suitably charged by the time your Uber arrives.

I’ve been testing the power bank and desktop charger for the last few weeks to verify EcoFlow’s claims, and to see how well the two products function at home and on the go, together and apart.

Fast bidirectional charging is the standout feature of this bulky workhorse of a power bank, followed closely by its built-in retractable USB-C cable that can handle 140W of input or output. When stacked onto the desktop charger you get nine USB ports and a staggering 600W of total output for your laptops, phones, drones, headphones, Starlink… you name it, as we enter the golden age of USB-C connectivity.

$180

The Good

  • Recharges (briefly) at an incredibly fast 320W
  • Simultaneous 140W USB-C PD 3.1 in/out on two ports
  • Built-in retractable USB-C cable
  • Remote monitoring

The Bad

  • Expensive and bulky for 99Wh
  • 320W possible when battery cool using proprietary connector
  • Display easily scratches, unreadable in sunlight
  • Nobody needs a screensaver on their battery

$200

The Good

  • Charges Rapid Power Bank at 320W
  • Charges two USB-C PD 3.1 laptops at 140W simultaneously
  • Large display with dial to monitor individual ports
  • Remote monitoring and control

The Bad

  • 320W output uses proprietary pogo-pin connector
  • Dim display can be scratched

The ultra-fast 320W charge is delivered over proprietary spring-loaded pogo-pin connectors on the bottom of the power bank and top of the desktop charger, with magnets to help keep them aligned. EcoFlow claims an “industry fastest recharging speed” from the combo, which seems to check out.

The closest competitor we can find is Anker’s $179.99 Prime Power Bank, which tops out briefly at 170W when connecting its 99Wh battery to two 140W USB-C chargers simultaneously.

I managed to charge EcoFlow’s Rapid Pro Power Bank at a maximum of 320.5W when stacked on top of the desktop charger, or 232W when simultaneously connected to both a 100W USB-C charger and the only 140W PD 3.1 charger I own. I’m unable to validate the 280W claim — though I have no reason to doubt it.

In both scenarios, EcoFlow’s power bank followed a typical charging curve for a lithium-ion battery that’s meant to preserve its health and prevent overheating. With dual USB-C inputs, the power bank maintained its max charge rate when the battery was between 10 to 50 percent full in my testing, but the pogo-pin connector was only pulling its max input when between 10 to 25 percent. However, on a mild day when the battery was warm due to excessive benchmarking, I never saw the power bank pull more than 250W when placed on the desktop charger — well below the 320W max advertised. The Rapid Pro Power Bank grew warm to the touch in my testing, but never hot.

The Rapid Pro Power Bank has four USB-C ports: 2x 140W input/output and 2x 65W output. It can simultaneously charge two power-hungry USB-C devices — like a high-end MacBook and gaming laptop — at 140W each for a max total output of 280W when both ports are active. It maxes out at 300W when either three or all four ports are active. Three of the charger’s ports also support 63W Universal Fast Charging Specification (UFCS) favored by Chinese device makers.

Notably, one of the power bank’s bidirectional 140W USB-C jacks is at the end of a flat 2-foot (60cm) cable that stays flush with the case when retracted with help from magnets. It’s incredibly convenient to have the appropriately spec’d USB-C cable with you at all times. I also like that EcoFlow labels every port with its maximum power rating and whether it’s suitable for input, output, or both. Nice.

In addition to the pogo-pin connector on top, EcoFlow’s Rapid Pro Desktop Charger features one 30W USB-A port and four USB-C ports: 2x 140W, 1x 65W, 1x 30W. It also supports a mix of 30W and 63W UFS charging. Max total output from the GaN charger is 280W when two USB ports are active, 310W for three, 295W for four, and 289W for five.

And yes, you can stack the power bank on top of the desktop charger for a total of nine active ports while the Power Bank charges through the pogo pins.

Good: magnetic pogo-pin connector for ultra-fast 320W charging. Bad: screensavers on your desktop charger and power bank. Photo by Thomas Ricker / The Verge

The 140W USB-C in/out retractable cable fully extended. Photo by Thomas Ricker / The Verge

The EcoFlow app lets you remotely monitor the power bank and monitor and control ports on the desktop charger. Photo by Thomas Ricker / The Verge

Charges up to nine devices simultaneously while the power bank charges. Photo by Thomas Ricker / The Verge

I tested the Rapid Pro Power Bank’s output capacity with my iPhone 15 Pro while it was on and being lightly used in temperatures between 20 and 35 degrees Celsius (68 to 95 degrees Fahrenheit). The power bank charged my phone from zero to full nearly four times — the last charge peaked at 87 percent before the power bank showed empty. Mathematically, you’d think EcoFlow’s 27,650mAh (99.54Wh @ 3.6V) power bank could charge the iPhone 15 Pro’s 3,274mAh battery more than eight times. Afterall, 27,650 divided by 3,274 equals 8.4. But that’s not how power banks work.

A power bank’s available capacity is much less than the advertised capacity due to the process of converting that stored chemical energy into power for attached USB devices. To charge my iPhone, the power bank has to continuously boost the internal cell voltage of 3.6V to between 5V and 9V. Energy is also lost to inefficiencies in the charging circuit, heat, cable resistance, and battery health which degrades over time.

A generic 99Wh power bank on the left shows just how bulky EcoFlow’s model is.

Placing the depleted power bank on top of the desktop charger returned the battery to 50 percent in just 10 minutes, 80 percent in 22 minutes, and 100 percent in 33 minutes. When the power bank was about 10 percent charged, it started pulling between 315W and 320W from the desktop charger until it reached 25 percent. The majority of the time, it was charging at around 250W before falling to 150W late in the cycle. This charging curve explains why the 99.54Wh battery doesn’t charge from zero to 100 percent in 18.7 minutes (99.54Wh divided by 320W x 60 min).

The power bank’s lithium-ion (ternary) battery is good for about 300 cycles before capacity drops to 80 percent, says EcoFlow. You can prolong the battery’s health by setting charging limits within the EcoFlow app to keep it within the recommended 20 to 80 percent range.

The desktop charger, like the power bank, feels solid and well built. The dial on the side is plastic but suitably tactile and clicky as it rotates. It lets you scroll through the status of each port — a push on the dial reveals voltage and amperage. I like it. The EcoFlow app gives you similar visibility and lets you remotely turn ports on and off individually. My only real complaint is the stiff power cable on the back that prevents the desktop charger from sitting flush against the wall.

The Rapid Pro Power Bank is bulky compared to a cheaper 99Wh / 140W model I purchased from a random Amazon brand last year, and the plastic display already has a long scuff mark across it. That EcoFlow display is unreadable in sunlight and barely readable in shadow. The desktop charger seems to use the same screen but visibility is better indoors. I wish EcoFlow’s portable battery had a “find device” feature like Anker’s power bank that plays a sound when triggered from the app.

1/12Powering a Starlink Mini, MacBook Pro, Apple Watch Ultra, and AirPods Pro.

The EcoFlow power bank and desktop charger compare favorably to Anker’s remarkably similar Prime series of devices. The Prime Power Bank I mentioned earlier can even be purchased as part of a $269.99 Prime Power Bank and Charging Base bundle that offers only 100W of charge over its pogo-pin connector. Anker sells a $169.99 Prime Charger without the pogo-pins and six outputs, but it maxes out at 140W on any single port or 250W total.

That makes EcoFlow’s Rapid Pro Power Bank and Rapid Pro Desktop Charger — available in a $360 bundle — the clear winners in terms of raw power and bidirectional charging speeds for anyone willing to spend a bit more. At least until we see what Anker and others have up their sleeves next week at the big IFA tech show.

Photography by Thomas Ricker / The Verge

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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Crypto Trends

Crypto-Friendly Xapo Bank Hires Tommy Doyle as Head of Relationship Management

by admin August 25, 2025



Crypto-friendly Xapo Bank has hired Tommy Doyle as its head of relationship management based in London, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Doyle was previously employed as head of Europe at crypto prime broker FalconX, and also worked at crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) in hedge fund sales, according to the profile.

He enjoyed a lengthy career in traditional finance before specialising in crypto, having worked for Wall Street banks including Goldman Sachs (GS), Citi (C), and Bank of America (BAC).

Xapo Bank is headquartered in Gibraltar and is regulated by the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission (GFSC).

The bank started offering bitcoin-backed loans earlier this year.

Read more: FalconX Said to Have Suffered Wave of Senior Staff Departures, Including General Counsel, European Head



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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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It's a bank holiday, please talk amongst yourselves
Game Updates

It’s a bank holiday, please talk amongst yourselves

by admin August 25, 2025


It’s a free and simple territory control game from hobbyist dev snow-kiss, in which you switch your tiles between rock, paper or scissors to claim those of opponents. I’m not sure the idea has serious legs, but I like how it thickens when you have more than two participants and a more elaborate board setup.

I wonder if it could be the basis for a top-down open world exploration game in which you move a blob of tiles around by absorbing/being absorbed by surrounding tiles. You’d have to worry about the coherence of the blob, as the roshambo mechanics tend to result in stray colonies of tiles peeling away from the starting mass. Perhaps the view could centre on the largest clump of tiles.

Anyway just a few Thoughts. Assuming you’re also in England, Northern Ireland or Wales – apologies to Scottish readers for initially calling this a UK-wide bank holiday – what are you up to today? Here is some possibly mood-appropriate mid-campaign music.



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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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NFT Gaming

OCC Cites ‘Safety and Soundness’ for Crypto Bank Anchorage in Pulling Consent Order

by admin August 24, 2025



In brief

  • The OCC terminated its consent order on digital assets bank Anchorage Digital.
  • The regulator brought the order in 2022 after granting conditional approval to Anchorage in 2021.
  • Federally chartered Anchorage custodies some of the BTC and ETH held in BlackRock’s spot ETFs.

The Office of the Comptroller of Currency (OCC) announced Thursday that it has terminated its cease and desist consent order against Anchorage Digital.

The regulator first issued a consent order to Anchorage, a federally chartered digital asset bank, in 2022 due to its “failure to adopt and implement a compliance program” that satisfactorily covered the Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering (AML) requirements. 

“The OCC believes that the safety and soundness of the bank and its compliance with laws and regulations does not require the continued existence of the order,” the termination order reads. 

In 2021, Anchorage Digital made history when the @USOCC granted us a national bank charter to serve as a full-scale digital asset bank, providing custody, trading, settlement, governance, and other regulated services for institutions. pic.twitter.com/sMKwq3tTfv

— Anchorage Digital ⚓ Prime is Live (@Anchorage) August 21, 2025

Anchorage Digital received conditional approval from the OCC in 2021, allowing it to offer crypto custody services to its customers and making it the first federally chartered bank to custody digital assets. After demonstrating the appropriate compliance, the consent order has now been terminated. 

“When we applied for that charter, we knew what we were signing up for: the path forward was uncharted for any crypto company, and at the time, many in our industry—and most of Washington—felt that digital assets and regulation were like oil and water,” said Anchorage co-founder and CEO Nathan McCauley in a statement Thursday. 



“We embarked on that path not because it was easy, but because we knew it was the right long-term move for the industry—laying the foundation for trust, safety, and durability in the years ahead,” he added. “And in an industry intent on ‘going to the moon,’ the seeming impossibility of our federal charter mission lit a fire under us from the start.”

The South Dakota-based firm specializes in custody, staking, trading, and governance for its members. In April, BlackRock chose Anchorage to custody some of the Bitcoin and Ethereum held for the asset manager’s industry-leading spot ETFs. 

In May, the OCC affirmed that national banks it oversees can buy, sell, and manage any crypto assets in their custody. Since that time, stablecoin issuer Circle as well as Ripple and Paxos have applied for charters that would make them nationally regulated banks. 

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August 24, 2025 0 comments
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Product Reviews

Pick up this Anker 5K magnetic power bank while it’s on sale for only $28

by admin August 23, 2025


The Anker 621 MagGo power bank is on sale for just $28 via Amazon, which is a discount of 30 percent. The deal applies to all five colorways, and there are some snazzy options to choose from.

This particular model didn’t make our list of the best power banks, but plenty of other Anker products did. The 621 MagGo is equipped with magnets that attach to the back of certain iPhone models, which makes it easy to charge up the handset while still using it. The 5,000 mAh device can juice up the latest flagship iPhone 16 Pro Max to around 60 percent when fully charged.

Anker

This is a thin and light device, so it’s perfect for pockets, purses, backpacks and just about anywhere else. It charges up via an included USB-C cable.

As a warning, the Anker 621 MagGo requires a magnetic connection via the smartphone itself or a magnetic case. It won’t work with non-magnetic cases. It also runs a bit hot, reaching internal temperatures of up to 118 F, which could be something to keep an eye on during use.

Follow @EngadgetDeals on X for the latest tech deals and buying advice.





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August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Bank Fires Workers in Favor of AI Chatbot, Rehires Them After Chatbot Is Terrible at the Job
Gaming Gear

Bank Fires Workers in Favor of AI Chatbot, Rehires Them After Chatbot Is Terrible at the Job

by admin August 22, 2025


Companies all over the world are currently racing to shrink their workforces and replace them with AI. Often, it seems, this isn’t working out for the firms involved. Case in point: A bank in Australia recently did so, but then had to ask its workers to come back after it turned out that the chatbot that it had launched to replace them couldn’t cut the mustard.

Last month, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia announced that it would be laying off 45 customer service workers as it rolled out a new AI-powered ‘voice bot’ that could supposedly do their job, Bloomberg reports. The bank claimed that the chatbot reduced the bank’s call volume significantly. However, the workers’ union got involved and says it has determined that wasn’t the outcome.

Australia’s Finance Sector Union, which represents workers in the banking industry, called BS on the bank’s claims and engaged CBA in a workplace relations tribunal. Now, it appears that the bank has admitted it made a grievous mistake, telling Bloomberg that its initial assessment that the customer service reps were no longer needed “did not adequately consider all relevant business considerations and this error meant the roles were not redundant.”

“We have apologized to the employees concerned and acknowledge we should have been more thorough in our assessment of the roles required,” a bank spokesperson told the news outlet. The same spokesperson said that the fired workers were being offered several options, including continuing in their old positions. Gizmodo reached out to CBA for more information.

FSU put out a statement on Thursday, sharing details about the situation. “CBA last month announced the jobs would be made redundant due to the introduction of a new AI-powered ‘voice bot’, which they claimed had led to a reduction in call volumes. Members told us this was an outright lie and did not reflect the reality of what was happening in Direct Banking,” FSU writes. “Call volumes were in fact increasing and CBA was scrambling to manage the situation by offering staff overtime and directing Team Leaders to answer calls.”

“Getting CBA to rescind these job cuts is a massive win – but the damage has already been done for our 45 colleagues who have had to endure the stress and worry of facing redundancy, some of whom have been with the bank for decades and were suddenly confronted with the prospect of being unable to pay their bills,” the union added.

While the particulars of this whole episode aren’t readily available, it certainly seems like yet another example of a company putting the cart before the horse with AI. Ultimately, AI is still an experimental technology, and its results are hit or miss. A much-publicized MIT study recently claimed that 95 percent of AI pilot programs at companies have, so far, been failures. With numbers like that, companies would be wise to keep their headcount high for the time being.



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August 22, 2025 0 comments
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GameFi Guides

Singapore Bank DBS Debuts Tokenized Structured Notes on Ethereum

by admin August 21, 2025



In brief

  • Singapore bank DBS is tokenizing structured notes on Ethereum.
  • The notes will give investors exposure to crypto markets.
  • DBS is the latest TradFi institution to move into the tokenization space.

Singaporean bank DBS will tokenize structured notes using Ethereum, the company announced Thursday.

The bank said it had partnered with digital platforms ADDX, DigiFT, and HydraX to distribute the product.

Structured notes blend debt securities and derivatives contracts to provide investors with exposure to a range of assets, including stocks and commodities. They are linked to an underlying asset and pay the investor a regular return. 



With DBS’s latest product, the underlying asset will be cryptocurrencies. 

“The note structure provides investors with a cash payout when cryptocurrency prices rise, enabling them to build exposure to the asset class without having to manage any cryptocurrency,” the bank said. “The note is also structured to mitigate potential losses should cryptocurrency prices decline.”

DBS said that by tokenizing such assets, they can become “more fungible and easier to trade.” 

“Asset tokenisation is the next frontier of financial markets infrastructure,” DBS’ Head of Foreign Exchange and Digital Assets, Global Financial Markets, Li Zhen, said. 

“Our first tokenised product, a crypto-linked note, also addresses the growing institutional appetite for digital assets,” he added. 

DBS did not immediately respond to Decrypt’s request for comment.

The bank isn’t the first to offer such a product. Wall Street giant BlackRock, the world’s biggest fund manager, debuted its first tokenized fund last year. Its USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund runs on Ethereum. And BlackRock CEO and one-time crypto skeptic Larry Fink has repeatedly spoken about tokenizing assets. 

Other major financial services firms are also exploring tokenization initiatives, including Bank of America and Citi. In a report this May, the World Economic Forum said that tokenization had “the potential to unlock the next generation of value exchange in financial markets.”

“While barriers remain, momentum continues to build, and financial institutions, policy-makers and technology providers need to coordinate regulation, interoperability and consumer protections to safely usher in this evolution,” the authors of “Asset Tokenization in Financial Markets: The Next Generation of Value Exchange” wrote. 

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August 21, 2025 0 comments
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Crypto Groups Push Back on Bank Lobby Over GENIUS Act
Crypto Trends

Crypto Groups Push Back on Bank Lobby Over GENIUS Act

by admin August 20, 2025



Two of the crypto industry’s leading advocacy bodies are pushing back against Wall Street bankers’ latest attempt to roll back the United States’ newly minted stablecoin law.

In a joint letter to the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday, the Crypto Council for Innovation (CCI) and the Blockchain Association urged lawmakers to reject recommendations from the American Bankers Association (ABA) and state banking groups.

As reported, several US banking groups, led by the Bank Policy Institute (BPI), have urged Congress to tighten the GENIUS Act by closing what they call a loophole that could allow stablecoin issuers and their affiliates to pay yields indirectly.

In a letter sent last Tuesday, the groups warned that failing to address the gap could drain as much as $6.6 trillion from traditional bank deposits, threatening the flow of credit to households and businesses.

Banking lobby on stablecoins yield loophole. Source: Bank Policy Institute

Related: Coinbase revives stablecoin bootstrap fund to boost USDC in DeFi

Stablecoin yield loophole

The bankers also argued that while the GENIUS Act bans stablecoin issuers themselves from offering yield, it does not explicitly prevent exchanges or affiliates from doing so on their behalf. They claimed this risks giving stablecoins a competitive edge by attracting users with returns similar to savings accounts, without subjecting them to the same banking rules.

The crypto groups accused the banking lobby of trying to re-litigate issues already settled in months of negotiations, warning that the proposed revisions would tilt the field toward traditional banks while stifling innovation and consumer choice.

“Payment stablecoins are not bank deposits, or money market funds, or investment products, and thus they are not regulated in the same way,” the crypto advocacy groups wrote. “Unlike bank deposits, payment stablecoins are not used to fund loans,” they added.

The letter pointed out Section 16(d) of the law, which allows subsidiaries of state-chartered institutions to conduct stablecoin business across state lines without requiring additional licenses.

Banking groups want the clause repealed, but CCI and the Blockchain Association argued that scrapping it would re-create “the same fragmented, balkanized regulatory regime that stifles interstate commerce.”

They also pushed back against claims that yield-bearing stablecoins could drain deposits from community banks. They cited a July 2025 analysis by Charles River Associates, which found no significant link between stablecoin growth and bank outflows.

Related: South Korea readies stablecoin framework; bill set for October

Yield stablecoins cross $800 million in payouts

Yield-bearing stablecoins have distributed over $800 million in total returns to holders so far, according to a recent post by StableWatch. Over the past 30 days, Ethena Staked USDe (sUSDe) led payouts with $30.71 million, followed by Securitize’s BUIDL at $8.39 million and Sky Ecosystem’s staked USDe (sUSDe) with $6.78 million.

Stablecoins yield payout. Source: Stablewatch

The total market cap of stablecoins currently sits at $288 billion, a fraction of the US dollar money supply, which the Federal Reserve reported as $22 trillion at the end of June.

Magazine: Bitcoin vs stablecoins showdown looms as GENIUS Act nears



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August 20, 2025 0 comments
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Gaming Gear

This Anker 5K magnetic power bank is on sale for only $28

by admin August 19, 2025


The Anker 621 MagGo power bank is on sale for just $28 via Amazon, which is a discount of 30 percent. The deal applies to all five colorways, and there are some snazzy options to choose from.

This particular model didn’t make our list of the best power banks, but plenty of other Anker products did. The 621 MagGo is equipped with magnets that attach to the back of certain iPhone models, which makes it easy to charge up the handset while still using it. The 5,000 mAh device can juice up the latest flagship iPhone 16 Pro Max to around 60 percent when fully charged.

Anker

This is a thin and light device, so it’s perfect for pockets, purses, backpacks and just about anywhere else. It charges up via an included USB-C cable.

As a warning, the Anker 621 MagGo requires a magnetic connection via the smartphone itself or a magnetic case. It won’t work with non-magnetic cases. It also runs a bit hot, reaching internal temperatures of up to 118 F, which could be something to keep an eye on during use.

Follow @EngadgetDeals on X for the latest tech deals and buying advice.





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August 19, 2025 0 comments
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