It Plugged Into Your Windows Laptop. That Doesn’t Mean It Works With It.
A USB-C hub can physically fit your Windows laptop and still fail at the job you bought it for. The connector may match, but the port’s actual features decide what works.

A USB-C hub can physically fit your Windows laptop and still fail at the job you bought it for. The connector may match, but the port’s actual features decide what works.

A USB-C hub can look perfect for a MacBook and still be wrong for your setup. Match the hub to your monitor, charger, ports, and workflow before buying.

A USB-C hub with more ports is not automatically better. The right hub is the one that matches your monitor, charger, storage, internet, and daily setup.

A USB-C hub can fail to work even when the hub is fine. Sometimes the real issue is a limited USB-C port that does not support video, data, charging, or docking the way you expected.

A USB-C hub can say 4K and still only support 4K at 30Hz. If you want smoother external monitor performance, check for 4K 60Hz before you buy.

A USB-C hub can have an HDMI port and still not work with your device if the device’s USB-C port does not support video output. The port matters too.

A 100W USB-C charger is not automatically better than a 65W charger. The better choice depends on your device, charging limit, cable, and whether you need extra power headroom.

That 100W multi-port charger may not give 100W to every port at the same time. Multi-port chargers usually share a total power budget across connected devices.

A higher-watt USB-C charger is not always the smarter buy. Your device decides what power it can actually use, so 20W, 30W, or 45W may depend on the device.

A charger can say “fast” and still not give your phone its best charging speed. The charger, cable, phone, and charging standard all have to work together.