Featured

Chillblast Fusion Nano 960 Gaming PC Review

Introduction


Chillblast gave us a friendly poke to see if we were interested in taking a look at one of their mini-itx gaming range. As I am mainly used to dealing with hulking gaming monsters which are show-pieces never to be moved, I was quite interested to see what offerings are available in terms of portable PCs of tiny small form factor, and finding out if they’re actually worth it or not.

Having a brief look over the spec sheet revealed on paper at least, that this seemed a fairly decent gaming rig, even touting an AIO liquid cooled CPU cooler. We’ve seen plenty of GTX 970s, 980s and even Titan Xs, but we’ve yet to try out the GTX960. Needless to say, we gratefully took Chillblast up on their offer and sure enough a fairly large yet light parcel turned up at eTeknix HQ.

Specifications

  • Name: Chillblast Fusion Barbarian Gaming PC
  • Case: Raijintek Metis Windowed Mini ITX Case – Red – modified
  • Motherboard: Asus Z97I PLUS
  • Processor: Intel Core i5 4690K Devils Canyon overclocked to 4.3GHz
  • Processor Cooler: Corsair H55 all-in-one liquid cooler
  • System Memory: 8GB Corsair/Crucial/Samsung  1600MHz DDR3 Memory (2 x 4GB sticks)
  • Main Boot Drive: Seagate 2.5″ SSHD 1000GB Hybrid SSD / HDD Drive
  • Additional Storage Drive(s): None
  • Graphics card: GTX 960 2GB based on the Maxwell Architecture
  • Power Supply: Corsair CX 750W 80 PLUS Bronze Certified PSU Modular Version
  • Optical DriveNone
  • Wireless: Asus A/C
  • Monitor: Not included
  • Peripherals: Not included
  • OS: Windows 8.1 64 Bit
  • Warranty: 5 Year Warranty with 2 Years Collect and Return (UK only)
  • Price: £869.99 as configured Delivered.

The outer box, sealed and in perfect condition, a good start!

Inside the outer box amongst a large amount of paper padding on all sides we have a smaller box and a case box.

The much smaller Raijintek case box

In the side box, we have the external magnetic Asus Wi-Fi antennae, extra modular power cables, kettle power lead, PCIE blanking plates, motherboard sound speaker and various manuals and drivers discs.

Removing the rig from its case showed that extra care had been given to the components inside the case, nice.

CPU-Z

GPU-Z

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

Colin Chambers

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Phil Spencer Is Against Expansions That Are “Manipulative” and Cut From Base Games

Phil Spencer has spoken out against what he calls "manipulative expansions"—additional content derived from material…

16 hours ago

Razer Launches USB 4 Dock for Gaming and Productivity

Razer has introduced the USB 4 Dock, a high-performance accessory designed to combine ultra-fast data…

19 hours ago

RTX 50 Will Seize the Whole Market Starting in December, Says GPU Cooling Supplier

A major supplier of GPU cooling components has indicated that we could see the arrival…

20 hours ago

MSI MEG X870E GODLIKE Motherboard Hits Stores for $1,099

MSI first unveiled its top-tier AM5 motherboard, the MEG X870E GODLIKE, in August this year.…

20 hours ago

Anker SOLIX C1000 Portable Power Station

80% UltraFast Recharging in 43 Minutes: Be ready for adventure in 43 minutes (100% in…

24 hours ago

ASUS TUF Gaming FX707VI 17.3″ Full HD 144Hz Gaming Laptop

Powered by Intel's 13th Generation i7-13620H 10 Core Processor Dedicated NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 (140…

24 hours ago