I WILL BE CONSIDERING GETTING THE ALIENWARE X51 THIS YEAR.
If you live in New Zealand you will know what our retailers are like. The x51 option lets you customize what you want in it and it's branded. I think only middle aged people who work in IT would be more confident in building their own systems than younger less experience people like me would be. I'll consider other desktops if NZ retailers have one. I do not want to order a system from the US/UK.
I was hoping to change the title of this Thread but can't.
The x51 has 6th gen Intel Core i7 6700 CPU which is CURRENTLY a HIGH END CPU. It also has 4GB GDDR5 Nvidia GTX 970 graphics card which is also CURRENTLY a HIGH END GPU. I looked up reports in order to try and bottleneck the 4GB GTX 970 you have to play very demanding 2015/2016 games in 4k ultra settings.
What I want is a system which looks cute and can play The Sims 4, Cities Skylines, and Planet Coaster in 1920x1080p High Settings with 40fps+. And from my research and videos on YouTube, the GTX 970 can handle it. CPU's are not important? If you check Windows 10 Task Manager, you'll find games are CPU intensive. When playing the PC games I mentioned above, I'm only using about 4GB RAM and sometimes 5.2GB RAM with Cities Skylines. And that's not just the game using the RAM. It includes the system and Windows 10 running in the background.
Windows 10 is a great OS it has Direct 12x support. And with games demanding better hardware, Direct 12X Support and a quad core high end CPU helps.
To those who say NZ$2,700 is too steep, check out Noel Leeming NZ, JB Hi Fi NZ and other authorized retailers in NZ. If we were to break down the x51 alienware hardware individual costs approximately, they would be as follows:
GTX 970 GPU: US$329 (Gforce.com site) = NZ477.29 google currency convertor.
alienware lists the GTX 970 option at NZ$780.85.... ok, rip off here.
Intel i7 6700 CPU: US$312 (INTEL's site) = NZ$452.57 google currency convertor.
Standard keyboards in NZ sell easily for NZ$40
Standard mouse in NZ sell easily for NZ$30
Desktop case in NZ sell easily for NZ$50
16GB DDR4 2133Mhz RAM may easily sell for NZ$300
Motherboard may easily sell in NZ for NZ$500.
I read in an HP NZ's site's Forum that replacing a motherboard on a laptop can cost NZ$600.
DVD drive may easily sell in NZ for NZ$90.
Ventilation fan may easily sell in NZ for NZ$60 it has circuitry in it.
Microsoft OS retail versions sell easily in NZ for NZ$129.99 approx.
1TB HDD in NZ definitely sell easily for around NZ$110 (and those are 5400rpm drives. a 7200rpm HDD which alienware has lets say add NZ$130.
All other hardware ports like USB etc which the X51 has, say easily add NZ$100.
Lets add this up after google currency conversion.
CPU: 452.57
GPU: 477.29
1TB HDD: 130
16GB DDR4 2133Mhz RAM: 300
Maybe add 20 for the fancy packaging box the x51 comes in.
Then we have to NZ GST which is 15% those American devices CPU/GPU
GPU NZ tax excess (477.29x15%): 71.59
CPU NZ tax excess (452.57x15%): 67.89
OS: 129.99
Fan: 60
Keyboard: 40
Mouse: 30
Desktop case: 50
Motherboard: 500
___________________________ Grand total in NZ currency: $2,329.33 approximately.
And on alienware's site it's $2700 approximately. But it's best for certain customers especially if they're not well versed on building a PC by themselves, if they get a professional brand to build and offer their products rather than build your own PC from scratch which isn't branded. 5 years ago I damaged my old laptop's 1366x768 screen and HP NZ charged NZ$500 for a replacement screen. It does cost company extra to source hardware materials and the labour that goes into building a product which is why they're selling the product a few more hundred more than 2,329.
Watch this video. It shows how well the Nvidia Geforce GTX 970 can play this game. While watching the video on your browser, change the video quality in the video to 1080p. After watching the video in the link at maximum resolution which the video is playable in, tell me if you think the GTX 970 is a low end GPU or not if it can do this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77q9tJoSv6w