A machine that will still have support in 2022?
You may not have heard about PC builder Stealth Machines, but apparently thatâs the way the company likes it. In fact, the companyâs web page proclaims that itâs the âunderground computer company of the hardcore gamer.â Weâd guess thatâs the âstealthâ part of the name.
So color us surprised when the Stealth Machines Espionage arrived and it wasnât matte black and sporting that new ECS Stealth motherboard.
The Espionage isnât extreme, but itâs nicely outfitted. Built around an EVGA Z77 FTW board, it packs a 3.4GHz Core i7-3770K overclocked to 4.68GHz. All four DIMM slots are packed with Mushkin DDR3/2133. For a gamer, the most important component is the graphics card. In this case, itâs the graphics cardsâ"plural. Stealth Machines held out until the last minute to score a pair of EVGA GeForce GTX 660 Ti cards.
Weâre not fans of the LED strips on the power cables, but you might like the colorful addition.
Would it make more sense to run a single GeForce GTX 680 instead? We think thereâs no easy answer to that question. Our general philosophy is to run the single fastest GPU you can afford, since it will give you performance in every game from day one rather than having to wait for SLI or CrossFireX profiles. We think the 660 Ti might be an exception to that rule. Basically, the 660 Ti duo will smoke a single GTX 680 card in most games and came surprisingly close to the performance of our zero-point rigâs GTX 690. Part of that is the result of the Stealthâs overclocked Ivy Bridge CPU, but itâs a shocker to see this PC just 16 percent slower than our zero-point in Batman: Arkham City and 11 percent slower in 3DMark 11.
Lest you cheapskates scoff at the GeForce GTX 690, weâd be remiss if we didnât point out that our zero-point hammers out 55.5fps in the tessellation-heavy Heaven 3.0 benchmark while the Stealth is way back at 38.3fps. Thatâs almost a 30 percent differenceâ"so there is a point to the heavy metal sometimes.
Elsewhere, the Espionage aces the zero-point in Stitch.FX 2.0 and ProShow Producer 5.0. Neither benchmark exploits the six cores in our zero-point, but the ZP gets payback in Premiere Pro CS6 and x264 5.0, which can eat all the cores you throw at âem.
In the end, the Espionage is a pretty nice gaming rig and has plenty of power for content creation, too. But we canât publish this review without some criticism. First, weâd probably opt for a pair of 8GB DIMMs rather than four 4GB sticks, to allow for future upgrades. We also had a small snag in the overclock, as one core failed during a Prime95 test. Stealth had us add voltage to the core and all was well. Our final criticism, though, is the price. The machine, while fast for its class, is also awfully expensive for its class. As a comparison, our Ultra rig is just $140 more expensive with a hexa-core CPU, GTX 690, 3TB drive, Cosmos II case, and an LGA2011 board.
Stealth argues that much of its value comes from the warranty itâs willing to put on the line: 10 years. Thatâs indeed one of the longer warranties available on a modern PC, but weâre not sure weâre really going to care about any PC we buy in 2012 in 2022. Still, we canât argue with the performance; it just doesnât offer the price-to-performance ratio we expected.
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