CyberPower Launches Gamer Ultra Series with A-Series APUs
AMD last week announced the availability of a couple of desktop A-series quad-core APUs -- A6-3650 and A8-3850 -- both of which are now offered in CyberPower's gaming PC lineup. These Llano parts are the main attraction in CyberPower's Gamer Ultra desktop line, and you can pick up a full blown setup for as little as $595.
You're not going to build a supercomputer for under $600, but the Gamer Ultra 7000 Elite does come with the following:
- CoolerMaster Elite 430 mid-tower case
- AMD A6-3650 APU (2.6GHz, Radeon HD 6530D)
- Radeon HD 6450 discrete graphics card
- Asetek 510LC all-in-one liquid cooling system
- MSI A75MA-G55 motherboard
- 4GB DDR3-1600
- 1TB SATA III hard drive
- 24X DVD burner
- Speakers / Keyboard / Mouse
- Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (w/ $50 mail-in-rebate)
- 430W power supply
A respectable machine for a daily workhorse, though if your budget allows, it could use a handful of upgrades to really be considered a gaming rig, starting with the discrete graphics card. There are a ton of configuration options available, and a whole bunch of post July 4th promotions, which you can check out here.
Image Credit: CyberPowerPC
Comments
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bowei006
July 06, 2011 at 5:24pm
When i googled the CoolerMaster Elite 430 i got a case that looks almost completely differnt in the front. should i guess that they modded it or somethuing
Also lolz on the fact that the intergrated on die dedicated GPU is a higher series (im pretty sure its a mobile series)
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triclops41
July 05, 2011 at 11:12am
fit this in mac mini sized chassis, and then i will be impressed.
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RUSENSITIVESWEETNESS
July 05, 2011 at 10:15am
Is this better than you can do assembling from the same parts yourself?
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nHeroGo
July 05, 2011 at 7:50am
I like language like "a full blown setup" because it reminds me of "top of the line entry level" in an advertising world where "premium" and "golden presidential royal deluxe" means "budget solution" and "value" means "item without value".
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Wingzero_x
July 05, 2011 at 9:13am
Then, again it could just mean that you value keeping more money in your own pocket than paying the Intel premium.
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