The Acer Predator desktop line has some of
my favorite promotional copy of all time, at least when it comes to PCs.
"Fight on the forefront of intergalactic gaming with a commanding
advantage," the Predator's splash page says, promising that the system
will "crush 4K gaming and prepare for virtual reality," while
allowing you to "power-up for galactic domination."
It all fits in with the extreme design of this gaming desktop, which
looks like the tank tread of some kind of future war machine. Or, as Acer
describes it, an "intimidating armor-inspired design." Even the
airflow vent directing air from the front to the back of the chassis is called
an Ice Tunnel (as in, "Gaming is hot, so stay cool with Ice Tunnel cooling
system").
Behind that somewhat goofy exterior and
hyperbolic marketing-speak, is a set of components that we consider the sweet
spot of first-gen VR desktops, with an Intel Core i7 6700K CPU and the Nvidia
GeForce GTX 980 graphics card (but the just-announced GeForce 1080 card will
probably eclipse that soon). This configuration also includes 16GB of RAM and a
2TB HDD/256GB SSD storage combo for a very reasonable $1,999. Different
configurations are available internationally, starting at £1,299 in the UK.
Only the smaller, newer Predator G1 tower is currently available in Australia, starting
at AU$3,299.
Acer Predator G6
|
|||||||||||||||
While most of the VR-ready desktops
we've tested and reviewed have plenty of ports on the front or top panels,
the Predator G6 has only two USB 3.0 ports, a media card reader and headphone
and mic jacks. Keep in mind your VR setup may require a couple of USB ports,
plus one more for an Xbox game pad (at least for the Oculus Rift), and you'll
need ports for the included keyboard and mouse. Fortunately, there are four
more USB 3.0 and two more USB 2.0 ports around the back. That in-the-box
keyboard and mouse combo might be wired, but it's a nice, hefty Steel Series
set, one of the better pack-in accessory sets I've seen.
|
|
Behind the armor-like treads on the
front panel are a few hidden features. One covered drive bay houses an
optical drive, while a second has a swappable hard drive cage. Below both is
a small pull-out arm, intended to hold a gaming headset. It seems sturdy
enough for even heavy headphones, but it's not a feature I ever looked at
another computer and wished for.
|
The case interior is not as easy to access as more specialized gaming PCs, requiring some hard-to-find latches and a screwdriver. And, there's no side panel window, so it's hard to see what's going on inside. That might be for the best, as the interior isn't as carefully hand-assembled with neatly bundled wires and clean routing as boutique gaming PCs. Note that most gaming desktops this size have a second PCIe slot for another graphics card, but here's there's only room for the single included card.

In both application and gaming tests, the Predator G6 performed as expected, falling behind more-expensive systems with faster Nvidia GeForce 980Ti graphics cards, but well ahead of a couple of systems that hit only the minimum VR-ready specs of a Core i5 CPU and Nvidia GeForce 970 GPU. As the main system I used for setting up and test-driving my new Oculus Rift CV1 headset, it worked great, keeping in mind that VR requires a steady 90 frames per second per eye.
No comments:
Post a Comment