Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Is Alienware Worth The Money?


Hint : It's not, as long as you can build well.

Alienware was formerly a high end PC company until it was bought by Dell. They still continued making these computers and they still do today. You'll note a lot of people dislike Alienware, except for the owners who really like them.

A lot of people's reason for disliking it is the cooling. Nearly every other company beats Alienware cooling wise. Their cases, are just not good for keeping the system cool (more of that in a future article)

I owned an Alienware a while back. It was a nice PC for it's time... but 1.5k? I realized today if me or my father could build, we could have made that rig for 800-1k dollars, including the monitor, speakers, and keyboard/mouse. And that's the reason I personally dislike Alienware. I understand that it is a company whose sole purpose is to sell computers, but take a trip down this article and you shall note that Alienware sells computers for what could be 1000 dollars more than their worth!

*Note ; I am unaware if Alienware/Dell bundles monitors or headphones/speakers with their computers, so I included both in case. If they don't after all, bonus points for me.
**If you actually build one of these, remember that you are the OEM, obviously, so you don't have the edge of AlienRespawn or any of Dell's included services for Alienware products, and obviously no warranty unless your specific part specifies what it is.
***I am aware that Alienware is a business and naturally needs to over-price their items to actually make profit. Still, don't fork over the extra 1k for that! ;)

Let's get going!

Here is Dell's recent line of Area-51 desktop PCs. 



$1700 Area-51 vs. Build


The Alienware claims to have an overclocked CPU. With the Corsair H55 and a powersupply with some breathing room, you should have no problem overclocking the CPU. The price difference is 600 dollars, assuming Alienware doesn't bundle monitors with their machines. If not, bonus.

$2300 Aread-51 vs. Build
I won't create a new list, instead, make these tweaks :

  • Keep the Radeon R9 370 or opt for a Radeon R9/RX series GPU. NVIDIA's GTX 970 doesn't have the capabilities that they say it has, which is why they were legally in trouble. Basically, you might not be able to run games on as high settings as you thought you would with this. Plus, the R9 370 is cheaper.
  • Buy another of the same RAM stick if you need 16 GB RAM
  • Get the Intel CORE i7 6800k CPU if you wish to match the CPU power
  • Get a 2 TB hard drive if you want to match Alienware's added storage, and a 128 GB SSD
$3250 Area-51 vs. Build



The price gap is only around 500 dollars this time, meaning we win still. But you can chop off a lot of money from this machine, and make the gap 900 dollars depending on how much you want to sacrifice.

  • If you don't game in 4K, a GTX 1080 is a little overkill for you (that said you probably do if you're this invested)
  • A Radeon RX 480 halves the price while delivering a pretty close level of performance ; not many programs will max out the power of an RX 480, GTX 1070, or 1080
  • You can derp around with the amount of Storage and RAM you need of you want to change it, as always.


$4650 Area-51 vs. Build
I did go out of my way to exactly match Alienware and increase your drive storage a bit. 


This built machine is 600 dollars less than Dell's offering, but you can cut it by a bunch by doing this.
  • Half the SSD space
  • -1 TB HDD space
  • Downgrade to RX 480 and half the GPU price. 
  • Half the ram of you don't need it
  • You can cut the storage even further if you don't need so much

This build here makes the price difference 1.3k! You can save more by halving the ram, cutting some storage, and making the price gap bigger, if you wish. 

Moral of the story : build trumps buy, as long as you know how. And it's not hard for a first timer to learn! Plenty of places online will show you how to build. I might even make a post for that one day. 

Thanks for reading my first post here! If you like desktops, building desktops, reviewing them, looking at parts, then be sure to check back weekly. I plan on at least doing one post weekly, right here.

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