Don't have eARC? Get Atmos w/ HD Fury "Arcana" - Pre-orders now LIVE!



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Expanding on this a little more. I think we would be much better off if we had never had the ARC and eARC standards.  As you stated, people want simply, and ARC/eARC just are not simple.  it would have better if the TV standard was 4 inputs and 1 output for audio.   They people would clearly understand how it works. Audio/video data flows in one direction only and you would have plenty of options to pick the setup that makes the most sense for you.   

The Sonos Arc can work the same way, except it has a standard HDMI input rather than an HDMI output that’s actually in ARC/eARC input, that no one understands. If your TV can’t pass through the audio format properly, then all you would need is a HDMI splitter or matrix which are readily available today.  Arcana would not need to be invented.  

 

 

 

Admittedly, I’m doing a lot of prognosticating here, but I’m guessing that what we consider “traditional” AV equipment is going to simply become more and more niche as the years go by. Will AVRs and regular 2 / 2.1 / 3.1 / 5.1 / 7.1 / ad nauseam speaker setups still be available? Without a doubt, just as there will be home theater enthusiasts eager to buy them (I would normally find myself in this category, but I unfortunately don’t have a room to dedicate to it). 

 

 

Agree on this 100%.  I remember when Bestbuy would have about 20 different AVR options for sale, a whole aisle dedicated.  Now, they make carry a half dozen at most.  Clearly people are looking more at soundbar options.

 

However, for most people (and I’m betting that number is 95% or higher), simplicity is king and everything is pointing in that direction from a media perspective. TV and movies are now streamed or rented on demand as opposed to being on physical media. Almost every new TV is a “smart” TV with streaming apps built in. You don’t have to go further than your local Best Buy to see this in action - the rows of DVDs/Blu-rays, receivers, and speaker systems have gone away to be, largely, replaced by smart TVs and soundbars. 

 

 

I might actually be a bit worse than that.  My teenage kids don’t even really care about TV much at all.  They are happy with their small screen.  But that could be something they ‘grow out of’.  But I digress. Point is, i agree with you.

 

Sonos Arc leads the way here - a single cable connection that makes it exceptionally easy for the average consumer to hook up and start enjoying quality audio in no time flat. That’s a major selling point that can’t be overstated since most people don’t care anything about how their AV equipment works - they just want it to work. They don’t care about extra inputs because they’re watching everything from the apps on their smart tv. And if the TV has enough inputs and eARC, even enthusiasts can be happy. Which is also why I think other manufacturers will begin to take note. Most people SAY they want flexibility, but at the end of the day they really don’t - they just want to turn on the TV and hear great audio. 

 

 

I don’t know that people look at it that way.  Yes, ARC/eARC makes things is, but most people don’t understand how it works at all.  I think many people are used to the input/output concept, and are a little unnerved by a cable that does input and audio only output.  And the fact that it doesn’t always work right just feeds that nerve.  I think most soundbar makers are going to continue to provide HDMI input and video passthrough on their speakers, even if it’s not needed, just so customers don’t question how it works, or wonder what else they need to buy to get it to work.  And as I said before, they’ll be back in a couple years when the soundbar can’t handle the video quality.

As far as TV smart apps go, that felt like a gimic to sell TVs when it first came out, and it still kind of does. They are nice, yes, but feels like it’s going to be out of date before your TV is.  But that’s the nature of any all-in-one device.  They may do one thing really well, but the rest of it likely to be subpar.  

 

Don’t get me wrong, I'm not particularly thrilled with the TV becoming both the switch and the limiting factor for audio. It's the piece in the chain that’s hardest and least likely to get replaced / upgraded and having it be a drag on audio performance is, well, a drag. Which, to bring it full circle, is why I’ve been so enthusiastically supporting the development of the Arcana to bypass the TV’s functionality. It provides a solution that’s the best of both worlds - the Arc gets to stay nice and simple for the majority of users while enthusiasts like us can truly unlock its sonic potential regardless of display device. 

 No disagreement here.  My point was that I don’t think many other soundbars are going to go the single HDMI eARC connection route that Sonos is going.  They will all have ARC/eARC capability, but I think they will still have inputs too.

 

Nice discussion.

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@Highfalutintodd, I certainly don’t disagree with your position, but my faith in a logical outcome is low. My expectation is that the solution we can expect to get is lowest cost for the companies, highest profit. 

 

Which is why a “simpler” future may actually happen. If the soundbar manufacturers can kill two birds with one stone - give customers an easier experience and reducing their manufacturing and support costs by eliminating features - they just might do it. There will always be companies that love to throw every feature at a product because they think a longer feature bullet list is better (looking at you here, Samsung), but others may get on the bandwagon. Especially once eARC becomes more prevalent. 

Of course, I always reserve the right to be wrong. ;-) 

 

Certainly in my world, I’d appreciate a central switch device that sends the video to a monitor, not a TV set with all the added electronics, and an audio system, separately, but in sync. I don’t expect that desire to come to fruition. So, the TV will need to be an updated device on a fairly frequent basis, if I want to get the latest thing. But then again, I managed to avoid the who “3D is the next big thing” debacle, too….so maybe not as often as they want, but more often than I do :)

 

It sounds like you’re describing a projector + receiver + speaker setup. ;-) 

This whole thing with the Arc has surprised me quite a bit. Until the Arc I was very dismissive of soundbars in general. Having used it and lived with it now, however, I’m finding myself quite enamored of its solution to the home theater conundrum. It’s expensive, sure, but the elegance and simplicity of the setup combined with the awesome sound (when combined with the Sub / One SLs) have been a winning combination for me and my family. 

I sat out the 3D thing, too. Just didn’t care. Even a little. 4K, however… that was enough to make me part with my cash. 

As for upgrading the TV for audio capabilities - again, glad to have the Arcana as a workaround for that. Admittedly, the Arc itself becomes the limiting factor as far as sound processing capabilities, but that’s not really any different in my book than having to replace a receiver when it lacks a feature you want. 

But, in my book, all of these sound formats are good enough to last me, personally, a good long while. The last major audio transition - stereo or Dolby Pro Logic to 5.1 Dolby Digital / DTS) happened over twenty years ago and things haven’t gotten exponentially better since. I honestly didn’t care a thing in the world about TrueHD / DTS Master Audio when they came out because they were such incremental improvements (unless you’ve got a major audio system of course), and Atmos only really is blowing up my skirt because it’s both a step forward in quality / immersion AND I basically get it for “free” with the purchase of the Arc. (I’m sure someone’s head just exploded reading this hot take, so take it as you will.) 

 

 

I was going to tease you earlier about when exactly September 15 will arrive, as it seems impossibly far away… But I just did, so I guess my earlier reticence is moot. 

Given how quickly time seems to be passing these days, september 15 will be here before I can blink and turn around twice! ;-) 

@Highfalutintodd, I certainly don’t disagree with your position, but my faith in a logical outcome is low. My expectation is that the solution we can expect to get is lowest cost for the companies, highest profit. 

Certainly in my world, I’d appreciate a central switch device that sends the video to a monitor, not a TV set with all the added electronics, and an audio system, separately, but in sync. I don’t expect that desire to come to fruition. So, the TV will need to be an updated device on a fairly frequent basis, if I want to get the latest thing. But then again, I managed to avoid the who “3D is the next big thing” debacle, too….so maybe not as often as they want, but more often than I do :)

I was going to tease you earlier about when exactly September 15 will arrive, as it seems impossibly far away… But I just did, so I guess my earlier reticence is moot. 

Really interested in this, not only to get the Atmos capability but to also help with the terrible lip sync from Sky Q that it claims to fix!

Quick question though - do I need to buy a HDMI switch too?  I can’t work it out...my inputs are as follows: Sky Q (UHD/Atmos), PS4, Apple TV.  As you can see, only one of those inputs supports Atmos and also happens to be the only one with lip sync issues.  Can I just plug the Sky Q into the Arcana and the other 2 into the TV like I would have done previously?

Thanks!

If you do end up getting an HDMI Switch, be sure to get a switch that can push 18 Gbps. Otherwise, you won’t get HDR10+ and you may be limiting your refresh rate depending on your source. Not to mention, it won’t have the bandwidth to push enough info to justify the Arcana.

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II’m betting that Arcana and like products may have a fairly long life considering that 1) TVs tend to be major purchases that aren’t replaced that often, 2) TV manufacturers don’t seem to be super concerned about the audio features of their TVs or being diligent about making sure that features like eARC are implemented correctly, and 3) other soundbar manufacturers are surely looking at the success of the Sonos Arc (now backordered two months out!) and may come out with one cable solutions of their own. 

 

I don’t know.  These are valid points, however, it’s not really a situation that we haven’t seen before. Technically, back when audio was essentially just 5.1, TVs had optical connections to handle passing through audio.  Yet the majority if AVRs and soundbars did not use that optical connection, instead they wanted you to use their equipment for HDMI switching and pass through the video.  Yes, they have add more functionality, but they can sell you a new AVR/soundbar every time audio or video standards change. Playbar was an exception, and part of the reason it stayed on the market for 7 years.  Not sure anything else stayed on the market for that long.  

Anyway, I don’t know that other companies are going to start limiting their AVR and soundbars so that they can’t be used as a switch or pass through video.  Yes, it can become a bottle neck for your video, but they are happy to sell you the latest AVR that isn’t a bottleneck.  Even if Sonos sales are great, people will look at HDMI inputs as advantage.  Don’t get me wrong, I would love to see a audio equipment and TVs be more component like with a HDMI switch/processing device component in the middle, just not sure it’s going to go that way.

Admittedly, I’m doing a lot of prognosticating here, but I’m guessing that what we consider “traditional” AV equipment is going to simply become more and more niche as the years go by. Will AVRs and regular 2 / 2.1 / 3.1 / 5.1 / 7.1 / ad nauseam speaker setups still be available? Without a doubt, just as there will be home theater enthusiasts eager to buy them (I would normally find myself in this category, but I unfortunately don’t have a room to dedicate to it). 

However, for most people (and I’m betting that number is 95% or higher), simplicity is king and everything is pointing in that direction from a media perspective. TV and movies are now streamed or rented on demand as opposed to being on physical media. Almost every new TV is a “smart” TV with streaming apps built in. You don’t have to go further than your local Best Buy to see this in action - the rows of DVDs/Blu-rays, receivers, and speaker systems have gone away to be, largely, replaced by smart TVs and soundbars. 

Sonos Arc leads the way here - a single cable connection that makes it exceptionally easy for the average consumer to hook up and start enjoying quality audio in no time flat. That’s a major selling point that can’t be overstated since most people don’t care anything about how their AV equipment works - they just want it to work. They don’t care about extra inputs because they’re watching everything from the apps on their smart tv. And if the TV has enough inputs and eARC, even enthusiasts can be happy. Which is also why I think other manufacturers will begin to take note. Most people SAY they want flexibility, but at the end of the day they really don’t - they just want to turn on the TV and hear great audio. 

Don’t get me wrong, I'm not particularly thrilled with the TV becoming both the switch and the limiting factor for audio. It's the piece in the chain that’s hardest and least likely to get replaced / upgraded and having it be a drag on audio performance is, well, a drag. Which, to bring it full circle, is why I’ve been so enthusiastically supporting the development of the Arcana to bypass the TV’s functionality. It provides a solution that’s the best of both worlds - the Arc gets to stay nice and simple for the majority of users while enthusiasts like us can truly unlock its sonic potential regardless of display device. 

II’m betting that Arcana and like products may have a fairly long life considering that 1) TVs tend to be major purchases that aren’t replaced that often, 2) TV manufacturers don’t seem to be super concerned about the audio features of their TVs or being diligent about making sure that features like eARC are implemented correctly, and 3) other soundbar manufacturers are surely looking at the success of the Sonos Arc (now backordered two months out!) and may come out with one cable solutions of their own. 

 

I don’t know.  These are valid points, however, it’s not really a situation that we haven’t seen before. Technically, back when audio was essentially just 5.1, TVs had optical connections to handle passing through audio.  Yet the majority if AVRs and soundbars did not use that optical connection, instead they wanted you to use their equipment for HDMI switching and pass through the video.  Yes, they have add more functionality, but they can sell you a new AVR/soundbar every time audio or video standards change. Playbar was an exception, and part of the reason it stayed on the market for 7 years.  Not sure anything else stayed on the market for that long.  

Anyway, I don’t know that other companies are going to start limiting their AVR and soundbars so that they can’t be used as a switch or pass through video.  Yes, it can become a bottle neck for your video, but they are happy to sell you the latest AVR that isn’t a bottleneck.  Even if Sonos sales are great, people will look at HDMI inputs as advantage.  Don’t get me wrong, I would love to see a audio equipment and TVs be more component like with a HDMI switch/processing device component in the middle, just not sure it’s going to go that way.

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I did see something sort of similar with my setup, which is also an Samsung ARC TV. I was getting DD+ Atmos for Amazon Prime, but not for netflix or disney +.  That was the case on internal apps and for fire TV cube.  I then got an Nvidia Shield and I am getting DD+ atmos on everything now.  I don’t know if Nvidia Shield is just better, or if the Fire TV and internal apps where just set to not play atmos before I installed Sonos Arc, and never adjusted properly.  I considered reinstalling the apps, but I haven’t really bothered sine I like Nvidia Shield better anyway.

I think there’s a ton of inconsistency in how the built-in apps work across platforms. I’ve got a Vizio and only the Netflix and Plex apps seem capable of providing Atmos for me - Amazon Prime and Disney Plus seem to offer Atmos on Apple TV 4K, but not through the Vizio’s built-in apps. Hence why I’m really looking forward to Arcana unlocking the Atmos power of my Apple TV. ;-) 

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The thing that fascinates me is that I’ve not seen a single other company trying to jump in to this space. I’m delighted a HDFury did, and have my preorder, of course, but I wonder why we’ve not heard of any other potential options. It might be that these guys are just more agile than others, and capable of quickly filling this void, and maybe we’ll see others have a product in a year or two...

As far as other companies coming up with their own devices, I don’t know.   I can see someone beating Arcana on price, or building in an HDMI switch to simplify things.  Don’t know how big the market it is for it, as it really only appeals to Sonos Arc users.  It’s possibly a shrinking market if people buy more eARC TVs that don’t have issues.  Then again, we may see more and more AV equipment that depends on eARC, creating more demand?

I agree with this. I don’t think this stuff is rocket science, but I do think it’s probably hard to implement well which is why we see so many eARC TVs from major manufacturers still having issues. 

I’m betting that Arcana and like products may have a fairly long life considering that 1) TVs tend to be major purchases that aren’t replaced that often, 2) TV manufacturers don’t seem to be super concerned about the audio features of their TVs or being diligent about making sure that features like eARC are implemented correctly, and 3) other soundbar manufacturers are surely looking at the success of the Sonos Arc (now backordered two months out!) and may come out with one cable solutions of their own. 

Regardless of how the future pans out, however, I am quite glad that HD Fury has our backs on this one. Sept. 15 will be here before we know it, and I’m really looking forward to seeing how well Arcana works in the real world. 

Apologies, for my lack of technical knowledge.

I have a Samsung 55” Q9FN with only ARC (not E-ARC)  ,  Sonos Arc/Sub/Surrounds ,  Sky Q with UHD and with Disney Plus  and Sony UBP - X700 4K UHD Blu Ray Player.

I can get DD+ Atmos from Sky Q films/programmes (if they are in Atmos) but not through the Disney Plus App or through the 4K Blu-ray.  Will the HD Fury Arcana help me getting more Atmos Content from  Disney Plus and the 4K Blu-ray ?

Many Thanks.

 

It will definitely help for the 4K blu-ray.  That will be using TrueHD for atmos audio, which requires eARC that your TV can’t handle.  Regarding Disney+, that’s hard to say.  You should be able to get that now given that it uses DD+ the same your Sky Q. If your TV passes thorugh DD+ for SkyQ, not sure why it does not for Disney+.  Perhaps your Sky Q boxes doesn’t allow for DD+ Atmos on apps or something like that?  

 

I did see something sort of similar with my setup, which is also an Samsung ARC TV. I was getting DD+ Atmos for Amazon Prime, but not for netflix or disney +.  That was the case on internal apps and for fire TV cube.  I then got an Nvidia Shield and I am getting DD+ atmos on everything now.  I don’t know if Nvidia Shield is just better, or if the Fire TV and internal apps where just set to not play atmos before I installed Sonos Arc, and never adjusted properly.  I considered reinstalling the apps, but I haven’t really bothered sine I like Nvidia Shield better anyway.

The thing that fascinates me is that I’ve not seen a single other company trying to jump in to this space. I’m delighted a HDFury did, and have my preorder, of course, but I wonder why we’ve not heard of any other potential options. It might be that these guys are just more agile than others, and capable of quickly filling this void, and maybe we’ll see others have a product in a year or two...

 

From what I’ve seen from following the company a bit lately, I think they were fairly well situated to respond to this rather quickly.  That’s partly because of how they are built and partly because this sort of functionality is in their wheelhouse.  It’s the sort of product they want to make. 

 I also think it’s because of how they do market research.  Which appear to be nothing more than a guy who reads a few different forums to see what sort of problems people are having trouble with that HD Fury could possibly solve.  They aren’t doing any formal surveys or looking at market research.  The main HD Fury ‘front man’ has said several times that Arcana was a ‘community project’ that would not have happened if people hadn’t lobbied for it and spread the word about it in other forums. I’m not sure that other companies who would make this sort of thing have that sort of marketing chain in place.

As far as other companies coming up with their own devices, I don’t know.   I can see someone beating Arcana on price, or building in an HDMI switch to simplify things.  Don’t know how big the market it is for it, as it really only appeals to Sonos Arc users.  It’s possibly a shrinking market if people buy more eARC TVs that don’t have issues.  Then again, we may see more and more AV equipment that depends on eARC, creating more demand?

 

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Apologies, for my lack of technical knowledge.

I have a Samsung 55” Q9FN with only ARC (not E-ARC)  ,  Sonos Arc/Sub/Surrounds ,  Sky Q with UHD and with Disney Plus  and Sony UBP - X700 4K UHD Blu Ray Player.

I can get DD+ Atmos from Sky Q films/programmes (if they are in Atmos) but not through the Disney Plus App or through the 4K Blu-ray.  Will the HD Fury Arcana help me getting more Atmos Content from  Disney Plus and the 4K Blu-ray ?

Many Thanks.

Just announced today: the first 1900 units sold (pre-orders are close to 1100 now) will ship on September 15!

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The thing that fascinates me is that I’ve not seen a single other company trying to jump in to this space. I’m delighted a HDFury did, and have my preorder, of course, but I wonder why we’ve not heard of any other potential options. It might be that these guys are just more agile than others, and capable of quickly filling this void, and maybe we’ll see others have a product in a year or two...


I was in that boat! I saw people on AVS forum talking about it and thought, that sounds interesting so I enquired on their site and got an immediate reply, this prompted more questions which again got fast reply so I put an order in for the Arcana. I then started thinking about a switch but the minefield of cheap options made me wonder and I decided that I didn’t want to get the Arcana and then have issues with a switch so again I checked with HD Fury and again they were very helpful. I now have a vertex 2 up and running ready for the arrival of the Arcana. Yes they are expensive but they are way more then just a simple switch and the support is first class. 

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The thing that fascinates me is that I’ve not seen a single other company trying to jump in to this space. I’m delighted a HDFury did, and have my preorder, of course, but I wonder why we’ve not heard of any other potential options. It might be that these guys are just more agile than others, and capable of quickly filling this void, and maybe we’ll see others have a product in a year or two...

There was one other German company who claims to have something coming out, but details have been sparse. 

The thing that fascinates me is that I’ve not seen a single other company trying to jump in to this space. I’m delighted a HDFury did, and have my preorder, of course, but I wonder why we’ve not heard of any other potential options. It might be that these guys are just more agile than others, and capable of quickly filling this void, and maybe we’ll see others have a product in a year or two...

Right place right time. Find a void in the market and fill it. Doesn’t hurt that it’s directly in their wheelhouse. 

And they’re moving fast to take advantage of the opportunity. 

Got to hand it to them. I wasn’t familiar with them before this, but if Arcana does what it’s supposed to, they’ll have a fan (and a vocal supporter) in me for the foreseeable future. 

 

I had not heard of HD Fury either, and already am a fan based on what others are saying about them, their support, and how open they are about their process and decision making. They are taking advantage of the opportunity, but I hope they take advantage of the name recognition they are gaining are start putting out more basic HD switches and splitters, etc,  as I image many people would be happy to pay a premium for HD Fury protects they know they can trust rather than take chances on a cheaper unknown product off Amazon.  I mean, if you’re spending $800 on Arc, and $200 on Arcana, why not spend $75 on a solid HDMI switch, rather than a $30 switch that might not work?

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I don’t doubt that at all. I wouldn’t be too surprised if they are selling more of their vertex2 and diva products that you can get as package with Arcana now than at their product launch.  I’m just wondering, being that many of the Arcana customers are not their typical customers, and likely never even heard of Arcana before, just how many doors are going to open for them.   

Right place right time. Find a void in the market and fill it. Doesn’t hurt that it’s directly in their wheelhouse. 

And they’re moving fast to take advantage of the opportunity. 

Got to hand it to them. I wasn’t familiar with them before this, but if Arcana does what it’s supposed to, they’ll have a fan (and a vocal supporter) in me for the foreseeable future. 

Good catch @Highfalutintodd.  Found that this was reaffirmed in the Discord channel. Sounds like they plan on shipping around mid September, but that’s not firm yet.

 

Nothing stated on why they are boosting the batch size.  I’m sure it’s to accommodate all pre-orders and distributor orders, as well as some for direct sale after it’s released.  Just curious if Sonos, installers, or some other source is interested in this, more than the other HD Fury products.

They’d said a few days ago on Discord that this is turning out to be their biggest product launch by far so I’m guessing they are definitely getting interest from their reseller partners. I think they know they’ve probably got a hit on their hands. 

 

I don’t doubt that at all. I wouldn’t be too surprised if they are selling more of their vertex2 and diva products that you can get as package with Arcana now than at their product launch.  I’m just wondering, being that many of the Arcana customers are not their typical customers, and likely never even heard of Arcana before, just how many doors are going to open for them.   

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Good catch @Highfalutintodd.  Found that this was reaffirmed in the Discord channel. Sounds like they plan on shipping around mid September, but that’s not firm yet.

 

Nothing stated on why they are boosting the batch size.  I’m sure it’s to accommodate all pre-orders and distributor orders, as well as some for direct sale after it’s released.  Just curious if Sonos, installers, or some other source is interested in this, more than the other HD Fury products.

They’d said a few days ago on Discord that this is turning out to be their biggest product launch by far so I’m guessing they are definitely getting interest from their reseller partners. I think they know they’ve probably got a hit on their hands. 

Good catch @Highfalutintodd.  Found that this was reaffirmed in the Discord channel. Sounds like they plan on shipping around mid September, but that’s not firm yet.

 

Nothing stated on why they are boosting the batch size.  I’m sure it’s to accommodate all pre-orders and distributor orders, as well as some for direct sale after it’s released.  Just curious if Sonos, installers, or some other source is interested in this, more than the other HD Fury products.

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One other consideration is the product availability.  This is a smaller outfit and appears to be making the product in batches of 1000. 

Looks like they’ve upped that initial order quantity, @melvimbe. I just noticed that the Arcana product page now says this regarding shipping: 

 

Shipping of the first 1900 pre-ordered units is expected before October 1, 2020.
Shipping of pre-ordered units above 1900 is expected before November 1, 2020.

 

So looks like there’s plenty more opportunity to get in on that “first batch.” 

If you chose not to pre-order though, your price will be $199, instead of the current $175.  That’s $24 right there.  If buying from the US, I don’t think there’s a scenario where you’re going to pay less by waiting. That said however, the hdfury.eu price is 155 euros, which converts to around $182 if my math is right.  Not sure what VAT and other fees would apply.

One other consideration is the product availability.  This is a smaller outfit and appears to be making the product in batches of 1000.  So even if you buy today, you’re going to be in the second batch.   After preorder, HDFury will surely keep some for themselves to sell, and then split the rest between a handful of distributors.  It’s entirely possible that hdfury.eu, and monoprice in the US, don’t have enough stock to meet demand for very long when it’s first release.  Particularly hdfury.eu, yes they have pre-orders open, but they are not authorized to do a pre-order and it does not mean they will be given enough stock to meet the demand.  I wouldn’t be too surprised if it’s a couple more months before they fulfill those pre-orders.

I got mine Hdfury arcana Now pre ordered on https://www.hdfury.eu
but it will be delivered around November 🙏
mostly in Europe they are super fast with delivery.. so hopefully they ship sooner.  

 

will you be exempt from tax if you do not order on hdfury.com but on hdfury.eu? I didn't know anything about hdfury.eu and so I ordered on.com

That depends .. if you live in Europe then it is cheaper .. if you live outside of Europe you have the chance that you have to pay tax and import duties ..

For EU residents I would have thought it depends on whether EU VAT is charged on the products and therefore HDFury hands over that VAT to an EU country’s tax authorities.  I could not immediately see any evidence that the products would be dispatched from within Europe or that VAT was being charged (but i didn’t look very hard).  So my guess is that import duties would still be payable, but I am not at all confident about that.

I got mine Hdfury arcana Now pre ordered on https://www.hdfury.eu
but it will be delivered around November 🙏
mostly in Europe they are super fast with delivery.. so hopefully they ship sooner.  

 

will you be exempt from tax if you do not order on hdfury.com but on hdfury.eu? I didn't know anything about hdfury.eu and so I ordered on.com

That depends .. if you live in Europe then it is cheaper .. if you live outside of Europe you have the chance that you have to pay tax and import duties ..