Kettles
Variable-temperature gooseneck kettles changed filter coffee. Holding a Chemex brew at 200 °F, an AeroPress inverted pour at 175 °F, or a green tea at 170 °F requires precision a stovetop kettle can't provide. The real differentiators between models are temperature accuracy, hold time, and how easy the gooseneck makes slow controlled pours.
Pour-over enthusiasts with a gas or induction stovetop who don't need electric temperature control and are willing to use a separate thermometer, or buyers who want the maximum kettle longevity with no electronic components.
New pour-over enthusiasts upgrading from a standard kettle for the first time who want variable temperature and gooseneck control without spending $160+ on premium brands.
Pour-over enthusiasts with limited counter space who want a compact, feature-complete electric gooseneck with both temperature display and hold function at the lowest price that includes both features.
Pour-over enthusiasts who make multiple sequential brews and find the Fellow EKG's 0.9L marginal for their session volume, and who want digital temperature display without the EKG Pro's Bluetooth premium.
Pour-over enthusiasts who want precise flow control and target temperature with minimal brewing overhead, and who prioritize ergonomic design enough to spend $179 on a kettle.
Tech-comfortable pour-over enthusiasts who dial in recipes by temperature and want to log brew parameters via the Fellow app, or users who simply want 1°C display precision over the base EKG's 5°C analog dial.