For gamers with deep pockets and are looking for a quality gaming PC, this could be the answer. HP will showcase its Omen X cube PC at PAX Australia in Melbourne this weekend. Here, participants can witness all its high-end kit that HP takes pride.
According to Gizomodo, HP's Omen X sports a bunch of different graphic options up to two full-fat GTX 1080p in SLI which is partnered satisfactorily with K-SKU overclockable Intel Core i7 CPU. Its four hot-swappable 3.5-inch drive bays champion the SSDs and capacious HDDs faster, and the Omen X also comes with a motherboard-mounted M.2 SSD.
The feature that stands out in HP's Omen X is something that everyone is unable to see though. A little tool kit that's kept away behind one of the front panels of the chassis; it's the one that you might be familiar with because of its Voodoo PC logo. Voodoo is famous for manufacturing high-end graphics cards like the Banshee.
The HP Omen X costs from $4499 to $7,000 which will go on sale in a selection of pre-built options in JB Hi-Fi and Harvey Norman. HP will let interested buyers to spec what they like on its Aussie website with the base spec that still includes the Core i7 and 16GB of DDR4 along with a 2TB mechanical drive.
Everyone can buy the chassis itself though which is originally created by Maingear with 32kg and 52 litres of four-thermal-chamber space inside, alongside that hefty 1300 Watt power supply for $999.
The HP Omen X booth supports onto Microsoft's Xbox One at PAX Australia and the Gears of War 4 multi can be played on PC and Xbox with cross-platform support.
An American multinational information technology company headquartered in Palo Alto, California, HP or The Hewlett-Packard Company develops and provides a wide variety of hardware components as well as software and related services to consumers, small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and large enterprises, including customers in the government, health and education sectors.
William "Bill" Redington Hewlett and David "Dave" Packard founded the company in a one-car garage in Palo Alto and initially produced a line of electronic test equipment.