Tom’s Guide Savings Squad: Why Tech Deals Matter Now

Craig Nash
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Craig Nash
Tech writer at All Things Geek. Covers artificial intelligence, semiconductors, and computing hardware.
7 Min Read
Tom's Guide Savings Squad: Why Tech Deals Matter Now

Tom’s Guide Savings Squad is a dedicated deal-hunting team launched to help tech buyers find verified discounts across major retailers. The squad scans thousands of deals daily from Amazon, Best Buy, Walmart, and Newegg, focusing on laptops, smartphones, gaming gear, smart home devices, and accessories. Windows Central readers should care because the team prioritizes Microsoft ecosystem savings—Surface devices, Windows PCs, and Xbox accessories get top billing.

Key Takeaways

  • Tom’s Guide Savings Squad launched as a dedicated deal team scanning thousands of daily discounts.
  • Free access via Tom’s Guide website and newsletters—no subscription required.
  • Focuses on verified price drops and historical lows with direct purchase links.
  • Windows Central readers benefit from prioritized Microsoft and Xbox deal coverage.
  • Squad includes expert deal hunters like Mackenzie Frazier, Deputy Shopping Editor at Tom’s Guide.

What Tom’s Guide Savings Squad Actually Does

The Savings Squad operates as a real-time deal aggregator with human curation. Rather than algorithmic feeds that surface every markdown, the team applies editorial judgment to highlight deals that represent genuine value—not just any price drop. Articles published by the squad include verified price drops, historical low prices for each product, and direct purchase links to retailers. This approach separates the Savings Squad from generic deal sites like Slickdeals, which rely on user submissions and lack tech-specific expertise.

The squad’s scope covers the full tech ecosystem. Recent examples include the Surface Pro 11 at $1,000 (down from $1,500 on Best Buy), Xbox Series S at $199 (a historical low), and OnePlus Watch 2 at $250 on Amazon. These are not theoretical discounts—they represent actual, verified price points at the time of publication. The team’s background in tech journalism means deal selections reflect understanding of product lifecycles, competitive positioning, and genuine savings rather than margin-driven recommendations.

Why Windows Central Readers Should Pay Attention

Windows Central occupies a specific niche: readers who care deeply about Microsoft’s ecosystem. The Savings Squad recognizes this audience and stacks deal coverage accordingly. Surface devices, Windows PC components, Xbox accessories, and Microsoft-adjacent products receive priority attention in the squad’s daily scanning. This is not generic tech coverage—it is curated specifically for the Windows and Microsoft audience.

The partnership works through cross-promotion. Windows Central shares Savings Squad deals via newsletters and social channels, creating a direct pipeline to readers already interested in Microsoft hardware and software. For someone shopping for a new Surface laptop or Xbox controller during the holiday season, the Savings Squad eliminates the friction of hunting across five retailers independently. The squad does that work, verifies the deals, and surfaces the best options.

How Tom’s Guide Savings Squad Compares to Other Deal Resources

The deal-hunting landscape includes Reddit communities like r/buildapcsales, standalone aggregators, and individual retailer sale pages. The Savings Squad differentiates through expert curation and scale. While Reddit relies on user submissions—meaning deal quality varies wildly—the Savings Squad applies editorial standards. A deal only surfaces if it meets the team’s threshold for genuine value and accuracy.

Windows Central itself maintains a deals section, but the Savings Squad operates at larger scale and with higher daily volume. Think of it as complementary rather than competitive: Windows Central focuses on in-depth reviews, analysis, and long-form tech coverage, while the Savings Squad handles the real-time deal machinery. Readers benefit from both—detailed product information from Windows Central, immediate deal alerts from the squad.

How to Access Tom’s Guide Savings Squad

The Savings Squad is free. No paywall, no subscription tier, no premium membership required. Access comes through the Tom’s Guide website directly or via their newsletters. Windows Central readers can subscribe to deal alerts through Windows Central’s own channels, which surface Savings Squad recommendations alongside native Windows Central deals.

The team publishes articles with specific deal details: the product name, current price, original price, percentage discount, and a direct link to the retailer. This structure lets readers quickly assess whether a deal matches their needs and budget. Historical low prices appear in articles, providing context—knowing that $199 is a historical low for Xbox Series S helps readers decide whether to buy now or wait for deeper discounts later.

Is Tom’s Guide Savings Squad worth following?

Yes, if you buy tech regularly. The squad eliminates manual deal hunting across multiple sites. For Windows and Xbox buyers specifically, the prioritized coverage of Microsoft ecosystem deals saves time during peak shopping periods like Black Friday and the December holiday season. The free access removes any friction to trying it.

How often does Tom’s Guide Savings Squad publish new deals?

The team scans thousands of deals daily, though not every scan becomes a published article. The squad publishes verified, curated deals—meaning frequency varies by category and retailer activity. During major sales events, expect higher publishing volume. Outside peak seasons, the squad still identifies deals but may publish fewer articles daily.

Can Windows Central readers get deals that other Tom’s Guide readers don’t?

The Savings Squad’s core coverage is the same across all audiences, but Windows Central’s cross-promotion emphasizes Microsoft and Xbox deals in their newsletters and social feeds. Windows Central readers see the same Savings Squad content, but with prioritized recommendations for their specific interests. This is not exclusivity—it is curation aligned with audience preference.

The Savings Squad represents a shift in how tech publications approach deal coverage. Rather than burying deals in generic aggregators or relying on affiliate commissions to drive recommendations, Tom’s Guide created a dedicated team with editorial standards. For Windows and Xbox buyers, the partnership with Windows Central means deal discovery becomes less about luck and more about expert filtering. That matters when you are shopping on a budget and want confidence that a deal is genuinely good, not just discounted.

Edited by the All Things Geek team.

Source: Windows Central

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Tech writer at All Things Geek. Covers artificial intelligence, semiconductors, and computing hardware.