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Chillblast Fusion Eyefinity review

in Desktop PCs

Verdict

It pairs Eyefinity technology with a lightning-fast rig that can power it, but you’ll really need to love your games to justify the price

Review Date: 7 Dec 2009

Reviewed By: Mike Jennings

Price when reviewed: £1,999 (£2,299 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
4 stars out of 6

Features & Design
5 stars out of 6

Value for Money
3 stars out of 6

Performance
6 stars out of 6


The PC itself, meanwhile, is more than capable of coping with Eyefinity’s increased demands. The Intel Core i7-920 is overclocked from 2.66GHz to 4GHz, which was enough to deliver a result of 2.8 in our application benchmarks. It’s the highest score we’ve ever seen, easily eclipsing the 2.58 scored by the Wired2Fire Hellspawn.

The ATI Radeon HD 5870 surged through our standard benchmarks with one monitor, delivering scores of 70fps and 44fps in our High and Very High quality Crysis tests. It remained impressive after adding the other two displays, coasting through the most demanding settings in Fallout 3, Burnout Paradise and Batman: Arkham Asylum at the mammoth resolution of 5,760 x 1,080.

It only began to struggle with Crysis on three TFTs and at its highest settings. An average of 15fps in our Very High benchmark at 5,760 x 1,080 almost exactly corresponds to a tripling of the workload over the single TFT setup. We had to lower Crysis to Medium settings to achieve a playable framerate, with the High quality test just falling short at 26fps.

Chillblast hasn’t skimped on the luxuries elsewhere. The 80GB SSD comes with Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit installed, and the additional 1TB hard disk, Asus Sonar sound card and Blu-ray drive are welcome additions.

Chillblast Fusion Eyefinity

The Silverstone Raven RV02 chassis has its motherboard mounted vertically, allowing easier access to the ports on top of the system. There’s room to expand, with three DIMM sockets, two PCI-Express 16x slots and space for additional optical drives and hard disks, even if the water cooling and vertical orientation of the motherboard make the Chillblast’s interior a little awkward.

Domino ALC water-cooling is used to chill the CPU but, when confronted with an overclocked Core i7, it wasn’t particularly efficient. The processor idled at a reasonable 42 degrees with the Domino on its lowest efficiency setting, but quickly rose to 90 degrees when we stress-tested the machine – ten degrees below the CPU’s maximum safe temperature, but hardly ideal.

We turned the Domino up to its medium and high efficiency settings and saw the CPU’s peak temperature drop by around 5 degrees – a poor result, given that this also increased the system’s noise output to an uncomfortable level. It’s worth noting that Chillblast offers the Akasa Nero HSF on its website, which is quieter than the Domino and £15 exc VAT cheaper, although the CPU is only overclocked to 3.8GHz with this option.

The Fusion Eyefinity also gobbles up plenty of power: at peak usage the system needed 354W from the mains, with each of the three monitors using an additional 19W.

Of course, an over-the-top system such as this doesn’t come cheap. The entire package will set you back £1,999 exc VAT, whereas the A-Listed Wired2Fire Hellspawn XFire will perform much the same job, albeit without the luxury of three monitors, for £800 less – not a saving to be sniffed at. It’s also expensive when you price up the system without the trio of screens, which retail for around £150 exc VAT each. This still leaves Chillblast’s base unit alone at a little over £1,500.

The PC may be superb, then, but a few niggles and the sheer excess involved with Eyefinity mean we’re not entirely sold on the idea. For certain game types, the technology allows for a heightened, immersive experience – whether that’s via sensory tricks in your peripheral vision or just tripling the onscreen environment. But you’d have to be something of a gaming addict to even come close to justifying the expense or the space it’ll occupy in your home.

Author: Mike Jennings

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User comments

Excessive?

To some gamers I dare say this will appeal, but isnt it really just overkill for its own sake?

Shakes his head sadly, returning his attention to Eve online running on a 46 inch sony hdtv.....

By kevinius on 8 Dec 2009

Ultimate display

Hey.Now theres an idea.Try it with 3no 52" HDTV's across.Now thats what I would call immersive.:-)

By Jaberwocky on 8 Dec 2009

Why can't I just read a document anymore

Why is the graphics industry limiting itself to the TV screen resolution sizes?

At 1600x1200, the vertical resolution of 1200 is large enough to work on A4 text documents full size and actually ready the whole page of text. Games also look fine at 1600x1200. Why limit everything to a TV's letterbox view of the world?

Perhaps just turn the 3 screens through 90 degrees to give an Eyefinity desktop of 3240 x 1920?? Same number of pixels = same processing power, but surely a better shape/ratio?

By ContactGT on 10 Dec 2009

pc gaming

why pay that money for a gaming pc when pc gaming is becoming extinct... take cod modern warefare 2 for example, it is quite clear infinity ward gave the pc version very little thought in comparison with the console version

By eliot94 on 10 Dec 2009

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