The aluminum-and-steel case has an understated design (at least among gaming PCs), yet still manages to include touches that any gamer will appreciate: a clear side panel, a cool blue-cathode lighting strip, and a blue-lit fan on the 450-watt power supply. Our Pro Gaming PC X6647 review unit uses Cooler Master's tasteful, functional black Cavalier case (you can also order it in silver). You'll save around $500, and you should hardly notice the change in performance, if you do at all. We recommend you do so and select the 3.8GHz Pentium 4 570 instead of the Extreme Edition chip. Luckily, you can customize the system before you buy. Still, we like the design and think ZT Group did a fine job assembling the Pro Gaming X6647. Its 3D graphics prowess is up to snuff, but its overall application performance leaves us wanting. We expected a PC with Intel's new 3.73GHz Pentium 4 Extreme Edition and ATI's 256MB Radeon X850 XT Platinum Edition graphics card to make a better showing in CNET Labs' tests. The $2,999 ZT Group Pro Gaming X6647 pairs Intel's highest-end processor with ATI's highest-end graphics card and achieves only mixed results.
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