Sadly, this only works with a handful of titles, including Apex Legends, Valorant, Overwatch, and League of Legends. Customized game lighting effects include red flashes when you take damage, green for a med kit, or flashing and sparkling to celebrate victories. It’s a smart idea that works well and adds genuine utility to the lighting. Govee promises that support will grow. Only time will tell. As cool as they are, these effects are best suited to fast-paced FPS and action games.
Because it analyzes the picture through HDMI, the Govee AI Gaming Sync Box can conjure reactive lighting for anything you play on your monitor, including movies and TV shows. While it is accurate and eliminates the slight lag of systems like the Govee T1, which I’ve been testing with my TV, it can prove distracting at times. For most TV shows, movies, and slower-paced games, light syncing simply isn’t desirable, but it’s nice to have background block colors to set the mood and help the screen pop.
The obvious comparison is the overpriced Philips Hue Play HDMI Sync Box, which is significantly more expensive than this system when you add a strip and light bars. The color-matching features are very similar, though the Hue Play HDMI is aimed at your main TV and lacks the AI smarts.
A better option for desktop gamers is the more recent Philips Hue Play Gradient Lightstrip for PC (8/10, WIRED Recommends). Interestingly, Philips moved away from HDMI with this light strip, relying on software to match the screen instead. There are pros and cons to this. It means less clutter, but streaming services like Netflix interpret it as recording and won’t run with light syncing.
I favor a minimalist desktop, and I like the diffuser on the Philips light strip, so it’s not ugly to look at directly. The Govee light strip is not designed to be viewed directly, and it looks horribly messy. You ideally only want to see the reflected light from it. You also need considerable space for the light towers and the box, and the Govee system adds a bunch of messy cables to your desktop.
The plastic box lights up too, but it often failed to sync with the rest of the system during testing, and it does not appear in the app as a customizable option. I was also a little disappointed that the system failed to turn on or off with the input source, though you can link the Govee app to your Google Home or Amazon Alexa setup and use voice commands.
Ultimately, I'm not a huge fan of any of these systems right now. The Govee AI Gaming Sync Box Kit is expensive, adds clutter, and the novelty wears off. But if you're dead set on desktop lighting, it is the system to beat right now. It delivers immersive, vibrant, and highly customizable lighting to your desktop, and the AI features are super cool (provided you play one of the supported games).