Let me get this out of the way from the get-go. PC's aren't bad gaming rigs. They do come with some important caveats, which I'll address shortly, but you're getting decent gaming hardware. In this case, it's a and combination, so it'll handle any game you care to throw at it.
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You're still looking at a buck shy of $3,000 of course but it's an RTX 4090 rig. They're all massively expensive and it just so happens that this one is the cheapest I've seen in all the so far. And given how difficult [[link]] it is to find an RTX 4090 graphics card by itself (unless you go with a ), then I'd certainly recommend considering this Alienware R16 if you were dead set on getting yourself some RTX 4090 glory.
Before you rush off and spend your hard-earned cash, though, there are a few things to bear in mind. First of all, Dell's fondness for using proprietary hardware in its gaming PCs. Unlike most system integrators (SIs), Dell uses its own motherboards and chassis design, and that often means a whole heap of proprietary connectors to deal with.
Fine if you never want to fiddle about and upgrade the PC, but you're likely to bang your head in frustration if you want to change the cooler, for example.
And speaking of coolers, Dell uses an Alienware-branded 240 mm AIO liquid cooler for the Core i9 14900KF. Intel's most power-hungry chip really needs something more substantial to reign in its temperatures under load. That or you hop into the motherboard BIOS and lower the power limits. That's easy to do on a normal motherboard, far less so with a proprietary one.
Rather than having an open-front case, Dell uses one with a gap along the edge, and as we discovered when , it's not really enough to ensure good airflow. The upshot of this restriction and the relatively small cooler is that the CPU can't reach its full potential.
The same is true of the RAM that Dell has fitted to this version. You get a huge amount, 64 GB in total, but it's rated at DDR5-5200 which is disappointing for a cutting-edge gaming PC. You might be able to swap it out for a faster set but there's no guarantee you'll be able to enable the relative XMP mode in the BIOS.
At least the storage is decent enough, with a 2 TB NVMe SSD as standard and room to fit another . Note that because the motherboard isn't standard, the M.2 slots are actually right next to the RAM slots.
I kind of miss the old days of Alienware's bonkers PC case designs but this one is quite classy and not enormous in size, either. So if you really, really must have a new RTX 4090 gaming PC, the cheapest way to get one is this Alienware Aurora R16, warts and all.