Features
The 7500 is loaded like a Boeing. An Athlon FX-55 processor with 1MB cache is paired with the obligatory SLI motherboard. These are gutsy choices for a consumer gaming machine -- there are few games that will cause these specs to blink, let alone choke. A 160MB Barracuda SATA drive provides a comfortable amount of room to store games, videos and MP3s, but you can always expand this -- the chassis has room for at least three extra drives, and Alienware offer a second 160MB drive for £101. Our review model came with 1GB of RAM in the form of two 512MB Corsair PC3200XL sticks, and this should be enough for most current titles. You can double up to 2GB for £93 when configuring your machine.
A pair of Nvidea GeForce 6800 video cards provide graphics output on the 7500. These are bridged to boost graphics performance and each has a pair of DVI-outputs, making a total of four DVI outputs. The £1900 price tag doesn't include a monitor, and if your current monitor is VGA, you'll need to use a DVI-to-VGA converter to make the 7500 compatible. The 7500 also includes Alien Adrenaline, a customised video performance optimisation system.
Sound is dealt with by a Creative Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS. This is a 7.1-channel surround sound card which was more than enough to make us spill our tea during a game of Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory. The Audigy card sends surround sound channels to eight different outputs, which you can route into the surround sound system in your living room (speakers also aren't included).
Single-layer DVD drives are unable to back up standard movie DVDs, but a double-layer drive, like the one in the 7500, lets you match the capacity of commercial DVDs. You can burn much longer home movies to a double-layer drive. Discs created with the 7500 will play back in a regular household DVD player.
The 7500 also includes four USB ports and two Ethernet ports. These two Ethernet ports will allow you to set the system up as a router, perhaps as the heart of a gaming LAN. Because two Ethernet ports are available, there is also the option to use a cross-over cable to hook up a network-compatible printer directly to your machine while still remaining connected to a separate LAN. Usually this would require a hub.
Performance
The chopper grazes our drop-off point and we leap into the tall-grass, sweat like treacle running down the computer mouse. A second later two incoming anti-aircraft missiles blow the helicopter apart like a piñata. This is war. War at the kind of frame rates that can make a grown man run from the living room shrieking, doomed to spend the rest of his life nursing shell-shock. The 7500 delivers experiences like this with little effort.
There's no pity in the world of virtual war, no medals, no real-world glory. But you can tell who's an online war gamer. You can see it in the thousand-yard stare of the kid on the bus, the itchy mouse finger of the bleary-eyed office worker. These gamers live quietly among us, but the 7500 isn't quiet at all. During a game of Battlefield 2, we got complaints from the other side of the office about the 7500's fan noise. To be honest, we didn't notice the fan at all, we were too busy strafing Chinese troops with our M16, but if you're going to use the 7500 as a home media centre PC, this may be a problem. The 7500's raison d'etre is to play games exceptionally fast, so it's hard to level criticism at it for generating so much heat that the system fans go into overdrive. Most gamers wouldn't be able to hear a real gunshot over the volume of their surround system, so fan noise won't bother everyone.
The 7500's a mouthy little machine, so Battlefield 2 seemed like the best way to push it to its limits. We're hesitant to tell you too much about this game, because it's the most addictive thing we've ever sampled, but suffice to say it ran spectacularly. The game arena rendered gorgeously with no perceptibly dropped frames. Skirmishes in the game can get incredibly intense, with multiple attacks from helicopters, planes and other players simultaneously bearing down on a very small area of the game environment. Whereas our home PC (an Athlon 2600 at 2GHz and 1GB of RAM) collapsed in a stuttering fit, the 7500 rendered everything flawlessly. Refraction on the surface of the sea as you're choppered into the war zone is nothing short of breathtaking.
If you're looking for a high-performance gaming platform that the very latest games really shine on, the Aurora 7500 SLI is essentially a super-console. While a PC can never offer the same level of hassle-free gaming as a PlayStation 2 or Xbox, the 7500 comes as close as anything we've seen yet.
Edited by Nick Hide
User reviews1
Add your review
francis p 18 February 2006
Good: Dual core, dual GPU, large+fast storage, liquid cooling system and lots of room for upgrades.
Bad: Price (about £3500)
Comment: I have a higher spec system than the one shown, but it is still the same system type. This is one of the fastest systems i have ever seen, its great for gaming and other high-end graphics work. Great cooling system allows non-stop high performance graphics and speed. I have used many benchmark applications and this system has got great results in all. I use Microsoft's game advisor to test my system and the results show it as the fastest system ever tested. The price is very high, but if you want a system which can take any game with max settings without slowdown this is well worth it.
See all user reviews