Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

How Hyte is tying your gaming PC together with a single cable

Add as a preferred source on Google
A gaming PC set up with Hyte Nexus Link.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends
CES 2026
Read and watch our complete CES coverage here

I’m not much for PC hardware ecosystems. You usually have to make too many hardware compromises, robbing you of the choice that’s inherent in building your own PCs. Hyte, the brand best known for cases like the Y40 and Y60, has a compelling option it has cooked up for CES 2024, though.

It’s called Nexus Link, named after the Nexus software used for cases like the Hyte Y70. The idea is simple — take all of the cables you’d use for power, lighting, sensors, and cooling and run it through a single connection. These devices are all managed through the Nexus software, allowing you to control lighting, fan speed, and more.

HYTE at CES 2024 | Keeb Keyboard, Thicc Q60, and More

There are two connectors that form the basis of the ecosystem. Hyte employs a Type-C connector for devices like RGB lighting strips, and it takes advantage of what it calls a Type-M connector for components like fans. The Type-M connection is wireless — the fans use magnetic pins to transfer power and data, allowing you to snap them together instantly.

Recommended Videos

We’ve seen similar products in the past, namely those from Lian Li, but Hyte really excels with the number of devices you can chain together. You can connect up to 18 devices on a single port, allowing you to essentially handle the hardware for an entire PC build with just one cable.

This isn’t just a way to daisy-chain power and data. Hyte calls each of the components in a chain a “node.” Each node is equipped with its own microcontroller, so it can not only receive data from the Nexus software, but also send it back. Some Nexus Link devices, such as the Nexus Portal NP50, are even equipped with their own processor and sensors, allowing you to monitor temperature and noise inside the machine (again, all through a single cable).

Hyte's Thicc Q60 all-in-one liquid cooler.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

The start of this ecosystem really begins with the new Thicc Q60 all-in-one liquid cooler — Hyte’s first all-in-one (AIO). This serves as a primary node in the Nexus Link chain, and it gives you a Type-C and Type-M output for a total of 18 devices. From there, you can hook up Hyte’s Thicc FP12 fans through Type-M connectors, and its LS30 or LS10 RGB light strips through the Type-C connector. These are secondary nodes in the chain.

And, you’re done. That’s exactly what makes Hyte’s Nexus Link ecosystem so impressive. You don’t need an extra, specialized controller, and you don’t need to route all of your cables to a hub. You just need a primary node, some secondary nodes, and a little bit of foresight to plan out how everything will fit together.

Hyte doesn’t lock you into this ecosystem, either. There aren’t many open standards in the world of RGB lighting, and Hyte isn’t changing that. But the Thicc FP12 fans still work over traditional 4-pin pulse-width modulation (PWM), so you can use them as regular fans without going into the deep end on Nexus Link.

There’s a lot to get excited about here. Hyte is getting around the cable clutter that results from fans and lighting, and with support for a massive number of components over a single cable. Products in the Nexus Link ecosystem are available to purchase now, and I suspect we’ll see Hyte expand its offerings over time.

Jacob Roach
Former Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
ChatGPT will now remind teens to take breaks and give parents more controls
New parental controls include Quiet Hours, Study Mode defaults, and alerts for serious account violations.
chatgpt-teen-safety-features

OpenAI wants to make ChatGPT safer for teens, and the changes go well beyond a simple content filter. In a new update, the company laid out its stance on why teens should have access to AI in the first place, arguing that keeping them away from it entirely would leave them unprepared for one of the defining technologies of their generation.

Nearly 90% of teens already use ChatGPT weekly for learning, research, or getting organized, which is why OpenAI says access needs to come paired with real protections built for their age.

Read more
ChatGPT’s new search tool saves you from digging through old chats, files, and images
You can also filter ChatGPT search results by content type.
chatgpt-new-search

If you have ever lost a great ChatGPT answer somewhere in your endless chat history, that headache is finally over. OpenAI has rolled out a major search upgrade that lets you find old chats, projects, documents, and images all from one place.

Before this update, the sidebar search only pulled up past conversations, leaving uploaded files, projects, and generated images completely out of reach. The new search option is now available across web, iOS, and Android, on every ChatGPT plan, including free accounts.

Read more
You can now link your favorite apps to AI Mode in Google Search to get things done
AI Mode now works with Instacart, Canva, and YouTube Music inside Search.
google-search-ai-mode-connect-apps

Google is making AI Mode in Search more useful by letting you connect third-party apps. Starting this week in the US, you can securely connect some of your go-to apps directly to AI Mode, letting Search actually complete tasks for you instead of just answering questions.

This update builds on a similar trick Google already pulled off inside the Gemini app, and now it is landing in Search itself. The initial rollout includes three launch partners, Instacart, Canva, and YouTube Music, with Google saying more app integrations are on the way.

Read more