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HP HDX eighteen
HP's HDX line is fairly straightforward–information technology courts multimedia fiends. From its double-wide demeanor to all the plugs and ports offered here, the HDX18–a fairly stylish desktop replacement–will stand out on your desk and let yous play games in the process. The HDX18 has some brawn to match its dazzler. In our WorldBench 6 tests, HP's notebook scored a solid 102. It's not quite the fastest we've seen, but it'south more than powerful enough to play some games as well as video. A 2.eight-GHz Core 2 Duo CPU (T9600), 4GB of RAM, and nVidia's 512MB GeForce 9600M GT GPU fuel our review unit of measurement. I can spit out frame rates of games like Doom three (it ran at a respectable 90 frames per second at 1280-by-1024 resolution), but what matters is that this auto can play this season's big guns without much of a hitch. I tooled effectually Fallout 3 and Left four Expressionless on the screen's native 1920-by-1080 resolution. Both looked good and ran fairly smoothly. Combine that with the BD-ROM drive (for Blu-ray discs), HDMI port, flashy finish, and corking exterior, and y'all take an incredibly handsome domicile solution you wouldn't mind lugging from room to room. PCW Rating: 84
–Darren Gladstone
The Phantom-Ten delivers ability in spades. This bad boy sports a 3-GHz Xeon Quad Cadre X3370 processor, 8GB of RAM, and two 80GB solid-country drives hosting Windows Vista (and a 7200-rpm, 320GB hard bulldoze provides file storage space). Add together to those components a pair of nVidia GeForce Go 9800M GTX graphics processors running in SLI, and you have a devastating gaming philharmonic. Information technology posted a tantalizing score of 133 on our WorldBench half dozen performance test suite. That alone makes it a speed king. In Enemy Territory: Quake Wars and Unreal Tournament 3, this desktop replacement dominated. At loftier settings and a resolution of 1680 past 1050 pixels, the Phantom-10 delivered frame rates of 48 frames per second and 87 fps, respectively. Adapted to its native setting of 1900 by 1200 pixels, it drove Unreal Tournament III at a respectable 50 fps. Its 17.1-inch screen is bright and clear nether typical fluorescent lighting–more than acceptable for extended gaming sessions.Thanks to all this ability, it should come as no surprise that this unit is amidst the most expensive desktop replacements, running $5950. Just if you're a full-blown gamer that demands performance, you probably won't blink at the price. PCW Rating: 78
–Nate Ralph
Toshiba Qosmio X305-Q708
Toshiba'south Qosmio X305-Q708 doesn't do subtle. A flaming red animal of a machine, the X350-Q708 packs a lot of cutting-border hardware, but some of manufacturer's design decisions are head-scratchers. This $4200 laptop packs a 2.53-GHz Intel Core 2 Extreme processor with four CPU cores; 4GB of RAM; and two nVidia GeForce 9800M GTS video cards, each with 512MB of RAM, set up in SLI style. On WorldBench 6, the Qosmio X305-Q708 scored 100. That'due south a little disappointing, considering that the HDX18 scored 102 — and costs less. However, the X305-Q708 did a creditable chore with Enemy Territory: Quake Wars and Unreal Tournament III, cruising through them at high settings and 1680-by-1050-pixel resolution, and managing frame rates of 52 frames per 2nd and 75 fps, respectively. In comparing, Alienware's more affordable M17 (see slide half-dozen)–it costs $2000 less–posted frame rates of 44 fps and 51 fps on the same two tests. Unfortunately, after loading this Qosmio with high-end components, Toshiba skimped on the 17-inch screen. though it is fairly bright, displaying vivid colors and sharp text, its WSXGA, 1680-by-1050 resolution is a bit underwhelming. That said, half the appeal of this machine is in watching it plough heads at your adjacent LAN party. Trust me, it volition. PCW Rating: 73
–Kaiser Hwang
Apple MacBook Pro
The newest MacBook Pros shine. The bright, glossy, 15.4-inch wide-screen LED-backlit monitor is pure joy to behold. And these latest machines make a decent get as gaming computers also, thanks to their GPUs. These MacBook Pros employ nVidia's Hybrid SLI engineering–a pairing of two graphics fries, one integrated in the motherboard (a GeForce 9400M) and the other detached (a GeForce 9600M GT). The machines were tested past MacWorld and PC Earth; MacWorld compares the latest MacBook Pro to every other MacBook that's come before. If you want to get the full breakdown on the Os X side, check MacWorld's review. For that matter, Game On blogger Matt Peckham as well took a very close look at how well the new MacBooks work as gaming machines. For PC World's WorldBench 6 suite to work, we need to run Vista through Boot Army camp. The resulting numbers show that the MacBook Pro is a good performer, scoring 93 in WorldBench in high-functioning mode. And thanks to the 9600M, it can play Doom iii at 125 frames per second (at 1024 by 768 resolution). PCW Rating: 69
–Jackie Dove
Gateway P-7811FX
From Gateway comes a somewhat stylish bargain. Running the P-7811FX is a ii.26-GHz Core ii Duo P8400 CPU and 4GB of DDR3-800 RAM. In fact, this $1399 car did a good task of handling WorldBench 6, scoring a decent 90–null that tears up the chart, but skillful enough to handle the current crop of games without breaking the bank. The big, 17-inch screen is a piffling on the dim side, but the colors pop well enough in nonetheless images and, because this is a gaming auto, wait natural plenty when you're trying to pick apart the opposing squad in Team Fortress ii. Problem is that the glossy coating on the screen volition generally distract you from what's happening on it. To help yous become over that minor shortcoming, our review unit sprouts eSATA and HDMI ports, iii USB 2.0 ports, FireWire, a flash bill of fare reader, and a PCI Express carte slot. The P-7811FX offers a healthy balance of satisfying gaming and low cost for those on a tight budget. Gateway'south got a good gaming notebook line on its hands. Next time, though, I'd really like to run into better on-board sound. PCW Rating: 77
–Darren Gladstone
Alienware m17
When you recollect of Alienware PCs, the give-and-take "inexpensive" usually doesn't come to listen. But the m17 is priced adequately reasonably (our review unit sells for $1999)–even while packing 1GB of ATI Mobility Radeon Hd 3870 X2 graphics processing power on board. As a result, this monstrous desktop replacement runs modernistic games at a respectable clip. It didn't exactly blow the doors off WorldBench 6, scoring only an 84. Bluntly, between the GPU, the 4GB of RAM, and the 160GB hard drive (spinning at 7200rpm, no less), I was expecting a piddling amend. I suppose the 2.26-GHz Cadre ii Duo P8400 CPU shoulders some of the blame, merely the skilful news is that this won't affect your gaming feel at all. Both Enemy Territory: Quake Wars and Unreal Tournament III, running at 1680 by 1050 pixels and loftier settings, hum along at 44 and 51 frames per second, respectively. Every bit a gaming machine, the m17 delivers speed where it counts, but it lags a footling in more conventional role-application tests. As if you'll use MS Office. PCW Rating: 73
–Darren Gladstone
Micro Express JFL9226
It's no shocker that Micro Express'southward octane-fueled JFL9226, packing 3GB of RAM and a 2.53-GHz T9400 processor, whipped through our WorldBench 6 tests. Nothing else could keep footstep: The JFL9226 scored a 103. What's more than interesting is that this model has the same guts–well, the same CPU and 3GB worth of RAM–as Sony'south 16.four-inch entertainment laptop and still comes out slightly alee. The notebook's 256MB nVidia GeForce 9600GT GPU knocked out reasonably solid numbers in some older games such equally Far Cry (95 frames per 2d at 1024-by-768-pixel resolution). Just expect a footling turbulence when playing modern, meridian-flight games jacked up to the machine's native 1280-by-800-pixel resolution. At first glance, the fifteen.4-inch screen underwhelms. That is, until I tapped the handy shortcut key atop the keyboard that activates the incredibly handy WoW Video characteristic. That push button quickly shuffles through one user-defined and 4 preset video modes, boosting the video quality noticeably. In the end, she may not be much to look at, but the JFL9226 has the quicks where it counts. By stacking on plenty ports, features, and power for the right price, Micro Express has put together another solid notebook. PCW Ratings: 83
–Darren Gladstone
Dell Studio XPS 16
The Dell Studio XPS line emphasizes style without sacrificing functionality. These multimedia laptops take a bit of leather trim here, a backlit keyboard there–and a whole lot of plugs, ports, and features packed in. Dell's classy Studio XPS 16 starts at $1199, but the blingy, premium version of the Studio XPS xvi that nosotros received for testing offers significantly more at a significantly higher price (our review unit sells for roughly $1804). Inside our Studio XPS xvi, a 2.four-GHz Intel Cadre 2 Duo P8600 CPU, a 512MB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3670 graphics processor, and 4GB of RAM run the 64-flake flavor of Windows Vista. That configuration notched a 92 in WorldBench 6, more than enough for everyday tasks–and some games when you're done. Thanks to the capable mobile graphics processor and the laptop'due south speedy, 7200-rpm, 320GB hard drive, I had petty problem playing Fallout three and Left 4 Dead at the screen's native resolution of 1920 by 1080 pixels. In brusk, Dell's Studio XPS xvi is a solidly built multimedia automobile that piles on features without breaking the bank. It's a solid choice for gaming and movies, as well as getting the job washed, while keeping costs within reason. PCW Rating: 76
–Darren Gladstone
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