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Building a Core i7 HTPC with Sapphire Mini ITX H67

Dead Space 2 is a survival horror third-person shooter. The player controls Isaac Clarke from a third-person point of view, looking over the character’s right shoulder. The game features no HUD elements, relying on holograms projected from the player character and his weapons to show information such as messages and ammunition count, respectively. Player health and stasis is shown by a visual indicators located on Isaac’s back. Isaac must fight an alien organism that infects and takes control of human corpses, turning them into “Necromorphs”, mutating their bodies.

Necromorphs must be dismembered as the alien organism controls host bodies via tentacles extending into their limbs. Other, larger types of Necromorphs that cannot be dismembered will often have yellow, glowing pustules, indicating weak spots. Occasionally, when an enemy gets close enough to Isaac, they will grab a hold of him, and the player must repeatedly press a key to fend off the enemy, with failure to do so leading to death of the player character.

With settings set to ‘very high' the system maintains playable frame rates, even during heavy firefights with a lot of monsters on screen.

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13 comments

  1. Now thats what im talking about !

  2. Thats a hell of a nice little system, better than my big ass desktop rig 🙁

  3. Id put in the new iceQ 6970 or something like that. let it kick some serious ass, but noise and wattage would rise a lot.

  4. I think over £1000 is a bit much for any media center, but thats more a full fledged performance PC. that case seems pretty cool though.

    Nice board from Sapphire, under £100 is a good price point

  5. The board is fantastic. its put me in mind to build a high end, small computer for downstairs. id probably opt for the 2500k.

  6. The PSU seems overpowered for the build, but at least it would be running quiet due to low overhead?. a method in the madness? obviously there for a better discrete card later if wanted.

  7. I always meant to build a media center and never got tempted by Fusion or ATOM as my mate has an atom desktop he built for 200 quid. he has lost all his hair using it, its that bloody slow.

    this board looks to be ideal for a new PC. its got everything you need,. well maybe except crossfire support.

  8. Yeah thats lovely, nice job, I could live with that myself

  9. Personally id go for a silverstone case, and use a 2500k with maybe a low noise card in the 68xx range.

  10. AT first I thought the system was unbalanced, why put a low end video card in with a Core i7 2600k? I see however the point now, its to keep noise down to as low as possible, but still offering decent gaming. im surprised that card is as good as the tests show. very impressive from sapphire.

  11. Nice system, my media center isn’t as powerful as that, but I really only use it for watching tv shows via the tv.

  12. The 2600k is really a very good price now, just over £200 for 4+4 cores. wasnt it closer to £300 when it was released?

  13. All very well, but where do you plug in the TV tuner (or more likely, TWO tuners)?

    The problem with mini-ITX is that there just aren’t any slots to plug stuff into, which is a bit of a non-starter for a media centre. USB isn’t really the way to go for this kind of thing (hardly makes for a tidy system and it’s relatively expensive), so the only way to go is a larger mother board.