PC Pro

Alienware Aurora

A solid gaming system for those who want the reassuranc­e of a big name, but it lacks ambition

- TIM DANTON

“Pre-overclock, the Alienware Aurora romped to 83fps in Metro: Last Light Redux at 1080p with settings set to the max”

As reviewed, £1,566 (£1,879 inc VAT)

The familiar Alienware head may glow from the front of the case, but this is no in-your-face gaming PC. Activate “Blackout” mode in the AlienFX settings and all the lights switch off, leaving an ordinarylo­oking system in its wake. If you seek disco-style RGB strobe lighting, go elsewhere.

There are other hints that this is a pedigree gaming PC. The carry handle built into the top; its chiselled profile; and all the powerful hardware that’s packed within.

For this is a compelling specificat­ion. Intel’s unlocked Core i7-8700K takes top billing; Dell supplies the processor at its standard speeds, but you can use the Alienware overclocki­ng controls to tweak it. There are two overclocke­d profiles – the more aggressive one boosts clock speeds to 4.6GHz, but our air-cooled system proved unstable at that point. It was happier with a more gentle boost to 4.5GHz.

This had a notable effect on benchmark scores. While the Aurora scored 204 in our tests at standard settings, it jumped to 216 with the overclocks in place. To put that in perspectiv­e, it meant our sample video was rescaled from 4K to 1080p in 8mins 11secs instead of 8mins 44secs. A respectabl­e improvemen­t.

It’s gaming where such tweaking really makes sense, though, and with our review machine shipping with an 8GB GeForce GTX 1080 graphics card this system is built for play. Preoverclo­ck, it romped to 83fps in Metro: Last Light Redux at 1080p with settings set to the max. That rose a modest 2fps with overclocki­ng. It was a more telling story in Dirt: Showdown, however, where it jumped from 117pfs at 1080p, Ultra settings, to 127fps.

These overclocks do cause temperatur­es to rise inside the case and the noise jumps a fraction too, but don’t imagine that this is a noisy machine. The whine of its fans blend into the background once you put some music on, only making themselves known when the CPU is pushed to its limits.

Still, to put the Aurora into perspectiv­e compared to “proper” gaming systems, you only need to look at the Scan on p56. I’m not just talking about its results in our benchmarks, although these speak for themselves. I’m also talking about the scope for upgrades and enhancemen­ts.

For instance, the grey sides of the Aurora are plastic to the tempered glass of the Scan, and once you take the side panel off you’re greeted with a sight more at home in a corporate PC than one aimed at hardcore gamers. Yes, it’s nice to see two tool-less caddies at the bottom for adding disks, and it’s also clever how the panel containing the power supply swings aside to reveal the motherboar­d. This makes it easy to add extra cards or upgrade the memory, with three sockets free. However, all that soulless grey steel and exposed wires make it feel a poor cousin to the Scan.

In fairness, this isn’t Alienware’s top-end system. The fearsome Alienware Area-51, which starts at £1,749, fulfils that brief. Instead, the Aurora is for those on a smaller budget – its bottom-end model includes a Core i3-8100 and Radeon RX 560 for £749 – and who aren’t after all-out power.

But this does leave me wondering why anyone would buy this rather than a custommade model from a British company, be that Scan, Chillblast, PC Specialist or any number of companies that have graced these pages. Is it for a sense of security? Perhaps. You only get a year’s warranty with the Aurora, but it’s on-site cover. Value? It’s certainly always worth haggling with Dell’s representa­tives online, and looking out for its occasional discounts, but assuming you’ll pay the full amount that Dell quoted us for this system, that’s still £200 more than the Palicomp Intel i7 Nebula that won our group test last month ( see issue 287, p74).

There are little delights. For instance it’s nice to see three topmounted USB 3.1 ports on the front of the chassis, for easy access if you place it below your desk. It’s also forwardthi­nking to include a USB-C port, while Alienware neatly integrates a DVD writer below the backlit alien head. These are all design flourishes beyond British companies, which must rely on chassis provided by third-party manufactur­ers.

There’s much that Dell gets right with the Alienware Aurora, but ultimately it’s a pimped-up version of a standard desktop. If I was buying a gaming PC at this price, I’d choose British. SPECIFICAT­IONS 3.7GHz Intel Core i7K-8700K processor Dell motherboar­d 16GB 2,933MHz HyperX DDR4 RAM 8GB Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 graphics 256GB M.2 PCIe SSD 1TB hard disk DVD writer Windows 10 Home 212 x 361 x 473mm (WDH) 1yr on-site warranty

 ??  ?? LEFT Alienware has neatly placed a DVD writer underneath its familiar logo
LEFT Alienware has neatly placed a DVD writer underneath its familiar logo
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 ??  ?? ABOVE Despite looking appropriat­ely extraterre­strial, the Aurora isn’t equipped with all the RGB bells and whistles
ABOVE Despite looking appropriat­ely extraterre­strial, the Aurora isn’t equipped with all the RGB bells and whistles
 ??  ?? BELOW Take off the side panel and the Aurora looks more like a corporate PC than a gaming beast
BELOW Take off the side panel and the Aurora looks more like a corporate PC than a gaming beast

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