Cooler Master Centurion 5
SRP: US$70
Intel Pentium 4 640 (3.2GHz)
SRP: US$172
Thermaltake BigTyphoon
SRP: US$47
Foxconn 945P7AA-8EKRS2 (945P)
SRP: US$98
Kingston HyperX 1GB 675MHz DDR2
(2 x 512MB kit)

SRP: US$152
HIS X1600XT IceQ DL-DVI DVI 256MB GDDR3 PCIe (H160XTQ256GDD)
                  SRP: US$196
Creative Audigy 4
SRP: US$77
Seagate Barracuda 7200.9 250GB
SRP: US$136
BenQ DW1640
SRP: US$51
HEC ACE Power 480W
SRP: US$67
BenQ FP71GX 17” (4ms)
SRP: US$280


Think our ultimate gaming rig is over-the-top? Well it was meant to be since it was built to be the best for the most hardcore. For the casual, non-elitist gamers, you don't require the highest-end components or give up an arm and a leg to have an enjoyable gaming experience. You want to frag with peace of mind, not to obliterate your bank balance. Drawing a line between price and performance, we've come up with a more mainstream system that will still be able to undertake all the rigors of gaming today while packing enough next-generation technology to give you headroom in future titles.

We do away with much of the fats to leave a lean PC with its core components still packing a punch. A Pentium 4 processor is used instead of a Pentium D, though you notice that both are actually equal in raw clock speeds. We chose a Radeon X1600 XT graphics card for this system. As far as mainstream is concerned, this baby will probably be ATI's next price/performance sweet spot for the X1000 range. You will still get SM 3.0 and HDR capabilities and with ATI's AVIVO video technology onboard, you can take a break from gaming and watch HD videos without any worries.



Seagate Barracuda 7200.9 250GB  
SRP: US$136

Games, media files and even regular applications continue to get larger (and more bloated). Luckily, the price of storage has gone down significantly and you can own a hefty 250GB HDD for less than what you would have paid for 40GB three years ago.