CyberPower Game Cube review

Small, simple, rectangular, but oh so desirable

CyberPower Game Cube
Don't be fooled by it's diminuitive size, the CyberPower Game Cube is a powerful little machine

TechRadar Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Small and svelte

  • +

    Mighty powerful

  • +

    Decent price

Cons

  • -

    A little loud

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Your average PC is a fairly uniform size. The familiar ATX chassis will take up the same sort of footprint next to, under, or on top of your desk, and is quite capable of blocking out the sun if you put it anywhere near a window.

Why can't we squeeze a normal gaming rig into a smaller chassis when all those consoley things can get away with something only a little bigger than your TV digibox?

Benchmarks

Well-chosen GPU

In terms of performance, the quality components chosen for the rig make it a bit of a go-er. The GTX 460 is well-documented in these hallowed pages as the mid-range card de jour, and that quad-core i5-760 is going to do the business games-wise too.

The Game Cube absolutely creams all the other rigs we've seen at this price. It even comes close to beating the £1,500 AdvanceTec ATFX Khaos. That only just keeps its nose ahead thanks to the Bloomfield i7 CPU.

There are few niggles with this machine. Obviously, it's not built for the upgrader. The brilliant design of the chassis means that everything has its place, and you'll be hard pressed to even get at the components, let alone remove and replace them with upgrades.

It also gets a little loud once you start gaming on it, although the distraction isn't too bad – it's nothing compared with the noise emitted from the Xbox 360's DVD drive, for instance.

Upgrade/noise issues notwithstanding, CyberPower's Game Cube is brilliantly specced for the price, and is one hell of a performer. Once AMD pulls its finger out we can expect an even cheaper hexcore version too. The Game Cube then is truly a miniature marvel.

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