TechRadar Verdict
Pros
- +
Good overclocking
- +
Liquid cooled
- +
GTX 580
- +
64GB SSD
- +
16GB DDR3
Cons
- -
Gamers better off with more GPU grunt
Why you can trust TechRadar
From the unassuming chassis, you'd be forgiven for thinking the Liquid Xtreme GT was just another mid-range machine from CyberPower. Maybe packing a Core i5 2500K, or a new GTX 560 Ti 448 Core. Or maybe, just maybe, it's a combination of a $750 processor and a $600 graphics card. It's the latter.
CyberPower has dropped the lower-end Sandy Bridge E chip, the Core i7 3930K, into this machine and paired it up with the best single-GPU card currently available, the Nvidia GTX 580. That's around £900 worth of processor and graphics cores, easily covering half the price of this full machine.
The motherboard is an impressive choice too – it's the Asus P9X79 Pro. Thanks to that motherboard choice and the quality water-cooling system on CyberPower's overclocked machines, we've got a CPU happily running at a speedy 4.5GHz. That's 100MHz faster than the chip in the only other Sandy Bridge E machine we've looked at, YOYOTech's $3,700 XDNA Platinum.
Platinum costs
The extra $1,000 you'll pay for the YOYOTech machine seems to only pay for the extra GTX 580 that rig has in its SLI array. That seems like a lot for a card that you can pick up from $600.
Apart from that extra graphics card, the rest of the machine is almost identical. CyberPower has managed to squeeze a little extra speed out of its chip thanks to its chunkier water-cooling setup. It has greater cooling throughput thanks to the fat pipes it uses instead of the smaller, closed-loop ones you get with the Corsair H100 or the Antec Kuhler. The YOYOTech machine may have a sleeker chassis, but the Cooler Master case enclosing the Sandy Bridge E innards is a modern classic.
Still, six months ago the equivalent rig came from DinoPC in the shape of the Core i7 2600K-powered Evolution 2600K OC. That was a $2,700 rig, but the balance between CPU and graphics leant far more heavily towards its pixel-pushing prowess.
The dual-GPU, GTX 590 monolith took up the lion's share of the Evolution 2600K OC's price-tag, where in this Liquid Xtreme GT the money is more focussed on the CPU. That's evidenced in the performance of the two rigs; in games the DinoPC machine with twin GPUs and a 2600K CPU has a massive lead, and in more CPU-heavy applications the six cores of the Core i7 3930K give it the advantage.
TechRadar Labs
DirectX 11 tessellation performance
Heaven 2.5: Framer per second: Higher is better
CyberPower Liquid Xtreme GT: 21.7
DinoPC Evolution 2600K OC: 32.4
DirectX 11 gaming performance
Metro 2033: Framer per second: Higher is better
CyberPower Liquid Xtreme GT: 15
DinoPC Evolution 2600K OC: 20
CPU rendering performance
Cinebench R11.5: Index: Higher is better
CyberPower Liquid Xtreme GT: 13.01
DinoPC Evolution 2600K OC: 8.97
In a way this comparison shows how little things have really progressed in the past six to eight months. The best gaming system for the money is built with an overclocked traditional Sandy Bridge chip. All the extra cores in the world can't push the Sandy Bridge E ahead in those terms.
As essentially a server chip though, for heavily multithreaded tasks, the 3930K is a powerhouse. If you're as into your multimedia manipulation as your hardcore gaming, this rig will be a perfect companion. As a focussed gamer, on the other hand, the CPU alone will be the definition of technical overkill.
I can't wait to watch 28 Years Later after seeing an unexpected cameo in the trailer that had my jaw on the floor
Nvidia facing Chinese anti-monopoly probe as business practices come under scrutiny
Sora AI video generation is here and it’s so good it’s made me want to stump up $200 for OpenAI’s ChatGPT Pro tier