Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Computing
  4. Reviews

LaCie Rikiki Review

Add as a preferred source on Google
LaCie Rikiki
“James-Bond-worthy construction and speed combined with exceptional value make LaCie’s Rikiki the killer portable hard drive to beat.”
Pros
  • Incredibly small form factor
  • Sleek and durable anodized black finish
  • USB Speed Boost actually works
  • Speedy 30 MB/s transfer rates
  • Excellent value
Cons
  • Sharp corners tear at pockets
  • Short cord could be inconvenient

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Introduction

If James Bond carried a portable hard drive, it would be LaCie’s Rikiki. Sure, his version would fire harpoons and self-destruct with the press of a button, but it would look – and function – a lot like this little wonder. The Rikiki, which means “tiny” in French, is among the smallest and subsequently most portable hard drives on the market and it doesn’t sacrifice speed or jack up the price to get there.

Recommended Videos

Design

Like LaCie’s similarly simple-but-refined Network Space 2, the Rikiki elevates “black box” to an art form. The chassis is just a rectangle extruded from aluminum and anodized black, but the sharp edges and brushed “grain” give it more character than anything you can mold out of plastic.

An inconspicuous LED indicator light and USB jack are the only mars on an otherwise smooth case, besides the subtle LaCie embossing on each plastic end cap.

At 4.3 inches long, 2.9 wide and half an inch thick, the Rikiki lives up to its name: It’s skinnier than Western Digital’s My Passport Elite, a full inch shorter than Iomega’s eGo, and beats Seagate’s Free Agent Go by the same measure. Unless you want to go solid state, you really can’t get much smaller.

Although the Rikiki would happily live in a pocket, the angular design does come back to bite it into this regard. The corners as this thing could double as weapons – perhaps another reason Bond would have the Rikiki. The prickly edges came precariously close to tearing our pockets when sliding in and out, and looked like they could easily chew through denim with enough wear over time. Save this one for the backpack.

Accessories

LaCie includes just one accessory with the Rikiki: an appropriately short five-inch USB-to-mini-USB cable. A longer cable might prevent a bit of stooping in the long haul, but for portability, which is clearly the focus here, the stubby little one can’t be beat.

Testing and Performance

Plugging in LaCie’s Rikiki for the first time prompts you format it, allowing you to choose which operating system (or systems) to use it with via a simple formatting wizard. A couple seconds later, you’re ready to roll.

Out of the box, the Rikiki comes nowhere near the 60 MB/s maximum transfer speed LaCie advertises, but it comes close enough to the competition. Copying a 791MB file to it (about the size of a compressed movie) took 25.9 seconds, while copying it back to a desktop drive took 27.1 seconds. That’s write speeds of 30.45 MB/s and read speeds of 29.18 MB/s – not too shabby considering Iomega’s eGo Mac Edition came in at around 20 MB/s through the same USB 2.0 interface.

LaCie also includes a tool called USB Speed Boost, which to our surprise, actually makes good on its promise of better transfer speeds. After a five-second install, you’ll need to plug the drive in again, and it’s good to go. Our write and read speeds jumped to 34.69 MB/s and 31.6 MB/s, respectively. That’s nowhere near the 33 percent gains LaCie advertises – more like an optimistic 14 percent – but we’re pleased to see any improvement from software alone. Unfortunately, it does leave a rather annoying icon in the task manager as clutter.

Value

At $140 for the 640GB version, the Rikiki offers storage at about 21 cents per GB. That’s cheaper than the 500GB Iomega eGo, 640GB My Passport Elite and 640GB FreeAgent Go, all three of which hit 25 cents per GB, despite their beefier dimensions.

Conclusion

Winning looks, speed and value make LaCie’s Rikiki the killer portable hard drive to beat. Although the corners can get a little bit stabby and the cord favors portability over convenience, both are small complaints for an otherwise stellar portable storage solution.

Highs:

  • Incredibly small form factor
  • Sleek and durable anodized black finish
  • USB Speed Boost actually works
  • Speedy 30 MB/s transfer rates
  • Excellent value

Lows:

  • Sharp corners tear at pockets
  • Short cord could be inconvenient
Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
Pebble is finally catching up on Time 2 orders, and I appreciate the transparency
Here's exactly when your Pebble Time 2 ships, plus what Pebble is doing for the small percentage of watches arriving with hardware problems.
Electronics, Digital Watch, Wristwatch

If you've been refreshing your order tracking page for months, Pebble just gave you an actual date to mark on your calendar. The company's July mega-update reveals exactly when the remaining Pebble Time 2 pre-orders will finally ship.

Beyond shipping updates, the July report also offers a clear look at how the company is handling its return to the smartwatch market. 

Read more
Made by Google August 2026: Everything we expect from the Pixel 11 launch event
Tensor G6. Gemini Intelligence. Higher prices. Google's biggest hardware event in years lands August 12, and here's what every major leak tells us to expect.
Google Pixel 10 Pro in the official silicon case

The next three months will define the future of the smartphone market across the globe. As three of the most important handset makers gear up to unveil the next generation of foldables and flagships, the memory crisis is worsening with each passing quarter, pushing up phone prices across every segment.

We have Samsung going live on July 22, 2026, with its latest foldables, followed by Apple’s new CEO, John Ternus, revealing the iPhone 18 Pro and the first foldable iPhone in September (like they do every year). However, the middle month — August — is when Google finally hosts its “Made by Google” launch event, a hardware-focused event that will unveil the Pixel 11 series. 

Read more
Pixel Watch 5 leak bares it all, and it seems Google is playing it safe again
Leaked renders reportedly reveal both sizes and every color, but Google’s next smartwatch looks more like another careful refinement than a reinvention
Pixel Watch on Wrist

Google’s next smartwatch may have just lost what little mystery it had left. High-resolution Pixel Watch 5 renders shared by longtime device leaker Steve Hemmerstoffer, better known as OnLeaks, show both case sizes and what’s claimed to be the complete color lineup ahead of Google’s expected August 12 launch event. The images were published in partnership with TheTideChart.com.

Assuming the renders are accurate, Google isn’t straying far from its established formula. The domed display and proprietary band system both appear to be returning for another generation.

Read more