Sunday, December 18th 2016
NVIDIA PC Gaming Revival Kit Detailed
Used to game in the 2000s, through your college, and then "life happened"? Want to turn your 4-year old Dell into a gaming PC, but its 350W generic OEM power supply is holding you back? For these things and other, NVIDIA is selling a "PC Gaming Revival Kit," a package consisting of a graphics card, an SSD, a PSU, and a game, to help you bring PC gaming back into your lives. The kit includes hardware to turn just about any desktop with a SATA port and PCI-Express slot, into a 1080p gaming machine (provided it meets some basic requirements of the graphics card).
Available in the EU, priced at 399€, the kit includes an MSI GeForce GTX 1060 3GT OC graphics card, a factory-overclocked GTX 1060 3GB card with a dual-fan cooling solution; a Corsair Force LE 240GB solid-state drive, a Corsair CX450M partially modular 450W power supply, an NVIDIA GeForce t-shirt, and a copy of "Gears of War 4." Bought separately, the graphics card goes for 229€, and PSU for 51€, the SSD for 77€, and the game for 45€, total: 402€, so it's not that big a value, but could point a lot of people in the right direction. It could also make for a decent X'mas gift.
Source:
VideoCardz
Available in the EU, priced at 399€, the kit includes an MSI GeForce GTX 1060 3GT OC graphics card, a factory-overclocked GTX 1060 3GB card with a dual-fan cooling solution; a Corsair Force LE 240GB solid-state drive, a Corsair CX450M partially modular 450W power supply, an NVIDIA GeForce t-shirt, and a copy of "Gears of War 4." Bought separately, the graphics card goes for 229€, and PSU for 51€, the SSD for 77€, and the game for 45€, total: 402€, so it's not that big a value, but could point a lot of people in the right direction. It could also make for a decent X'mas gift.
50 Comments on NVIDIA PC Gaming Revival Kit Detailed
MSI video card,
Corsair crappy PSU...
Regular M$ game...
Nividia Tshirt.... wow ... 100% disappointing of a "Nvidia" kit that contains moar publicity and craps than nvidia itself products,
they should start thinking out their bundles again ...
Nvidia GeForce GTX 10"XX" Founders / Reference edition video card,
Branded Nvidia 450/500W 80 + Bronze PSU [Branded model from seasonic or a better manufacturer]
Nvidia SSD drive [again branded from well known manufacturer ]
Nvidia official Cap / Shirt
Steam $50 Gift Card
That will be better, i know that will requiere moar investment to achieve but will bring better consumer bundles and better company image, than selling a "happy box" full of low end craps at high price...
REgards,
Now if this had a CD that like automatically moved your Win7 install and other basic OS programs that might have merit, as most people can't transfer all their HHD over to 240Gb SSD. So if Nvidia had a program that had that happen for the uninitiated that might be great but still no Win10 so no Dx12 game play for those.
When you can just buy a HP Envy 750-411 Desktop Computer; Intel Core i5-6400 Processor 2.70GHz; AMD Radeon RX 480 4GB GDDR5 VR Ready; 8GB RAM; 1TB HDD for $660; throwing $400 for this is a sick joke!
And also that's a MSI Paper Tiger card, it's super low end with an aluminum extrusion and believe one heat pipe. That might be worth $160 if you're un-informed. The 3 parts would be hard to push the price above $275.
I can't think of scenario where this kit is a good idea.
Joking aside, you're just showing off because once upon a time, you told the Mrs what to do. I saw right through that :D
Or have a separate product called the Nvidia Nostalgia Kit
The Windows 10 kernel actually runs very fast on a core 2 duo and I think it's faster than Windows 7.
but i am wondering who this kit is for
if you buy this kit
your going to open your pc and put in a power supply a graphics card and new ssd
then reinstall windows
and all the drivers
your going to need a fair amount of knowledge of the workings of the pc
and if you know this then why buy a kit
its not saving you any money
in fact its going to cost you at least 60 euros more than if you bought the parts
and if your not sure which parts to get you could ask on a few forums to get some advise
so im wondering who is this for
The price tag shouldn't be as bad as some of you think though. I assume that the customer also gets a good manual on how to install the stuff.
What I think about the kit:
Target performance: Hard to reach if the CPU (and available RAM) isn't up to specs, which it likely isn't for most users in the target group.
SSD: Shouldn't be there in the first place!
* 240GB is too little for use as a main disk.
* A ~100GB dedicated system disk is too complicated to install (given the target group).
* A 1TB main disk to replace the HDD is too expensive.
Graphics card: Suboptimal version.
* As been pointed out earlier in this thread the 3GB VRAM combined with the GTX 1060 GPU is a bad matching with poor longevity.
* Given the target group a 6GB GTX 1060 can be expected to mismatch a lesser CPU.
* I think a GTX 1050Ti would be optimal to provide good performance at a good price point combined with most CPUs. (Won't necessarily meet the target performance though.)
PSU: Just right!
* It fits the ATX size standard, 14cm deep.
* Plenty of Power! (120W GPU plus 150W other parts (mobo, CPU, RAM, HDD, fans, etc.) give you 180W (55%) surplus capacity!)
T-shirt and game: The shirt is good if there's a discount to the price tag for marketing Nvidia. The game doesn't appeal to all potential customers and therefore can't be said to add value.
Other stuff: As mentioned above there should be a good manual provided, adding value. An ESD protective wrist band should be nice as well. I can't say if any of this actually is enclosed though.
To make it a good kit:
* Remove the SSD.
* GTX 1050Ti instead of GTX 1060.
* Adjust the proclaimed performance target to reflect reality. (Useful framerates at 1080p with "medium" to "high" settings, depending on title and CPU/RAM.)
* Halve the kit price, to match those changes.
Regards,
Regards,
Twas a joke ;)
Regards,