People in this thread are Xtreme at everything other than intelligence hahahahha.
This PC can game better than most PCs available at every brick and mortar store like Best Buy etc.
People in this thread are Xtreme at everything other than intelligence hahahahha.
This PC can game better than most PCs available at every brick and mortar store like Best Buy etc.
For the cost yes, but considering alot of HP / Gateways $800-1400 models, this statement is not true. They include GTX 260s with i5/i7s/Phenom 2s with 6+ GB of ram and much larger HDs with many of their machines now...
If they sold this in a big box store with a detailed instruction manual, then it could have a life. Selling it on an online etailer however is... fail. Most people who buy online tend to know better or soon learn better ( due to comparitive shopping being much eaiser )
@sayaa
Not to pick fights but I still have a G92 (8800GT 512 aka 9800GT ) and they struggle at 1650x1050 in most games now days. I tend to run stuff at 1280x800 tops with no AA and medium to high settings. Hell even the 4870 has trouble in some games at 1680x1050 now. I suppose its down to what you deem "playable" but in my book, they don't have the juice anymore.
Anyways I still stand by the fact Nvidia *could* have made something out of this but it just wasn't done properly to have a real shot. With proper marketing, and availability in retail stores, they'd move a fair few units. When I worked retail I ran into countless customers seeking an affordable, store bought machine that could play games reasonably.
Last edited by Chickenfeed; 02-24-2010 at 04:49 PM.
Feedanator 7.0
CASE:R5|PSU:850G2|CPU:i7 6850K|MB:x99 Ultra|RAM:8x4 2666|GPU:980TI|SSD:BPX256/Evo500|SOUND:2i4/HS8
LCD:XB271HU|OS:Win10|INPUT:G900/K70 |HS/F:H115i
Agreed on the etailer part. Marketed properly at a brick and mortar, it would work. I don't see the big three ( HP, Dell, Other) too happy about it since the marketing would essentially say that this $500 dollar machine can game better than that i5 equipped, 8 GB rammed, $1200 machine.
Seems like a nice way to introduce someone into the world of PC building if they've never done it before. I guess at under $500 it's not a bad deal by any means, since it has decent components, but I think anyone who has done a bit of research will opt for selecting their own components individually.
ExactlyThey like their high margins (given all oems use mainly lower end bulk parts ; eg no name memory, garbage powersupplys, basic / limited motherboard, and in most cases half ass plastic cases with no airflow ) and stuff like this would really kick up some dirt in their faces.
Feedanator 7.0
CASE:R5|PSU:850G2|CPU:i7 6850K|MB:x99 Ultra|RAM:8x4 2666|GPU:980TI|SSD:BPX256/Evo500|SOUND:2i4/HS8
LCD:XB271HU|OS:Win10|INPUT:G900/K70 |HS/F:H115i
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