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.


 

Kingston HyperX 1GB 675MHz DDR2 (2 x 512MB kit) – (KHX5400D2K2/1G)  SRP: US$152

Since this is essentially still a gamer’s rig, we chose to equip it with a pair of 512MB Kingston HyperX DDR2 PC5400 memory. Not exactly the 900MHz demons from our Ultimate rig, but Kingston 's HyperX modules are still rated higher than regular PC5400 class memory with at 675MHz and can run at tighter timings of 10-4-4-4.