Hard-core PC gamers can be easily spotted by their clawed and blistered left hand, worn out from hours of keyboard-bashing as they attempt to fight their way through virtual worlds and deadly warzones. So it was only a matter of time before someone came up with a gaming glove to relieve PC gaming fans from chronic RSI. The Peregrine glove is designed to feel like "a second skin", and it has sensors all over the fingers that can be programmed with the keyboard shortcuts used by gaming fans as they cut a swathe through Azeroth. The idea is that rather than stabbing at a combination of keys on the keyboard, players instead touch their thumb to the appropriate sensor on the glove to perform the same function. The friendly man who gave me a demo of the Peregrine said it meant gamers could react more quickly to a situation, saving valuable seconds, and could even mean "the difference between levelling up and getting pwned". The technology behind the glove is undoubtedly impressive, but the whole application of it just seems bizarre.