Aria Gladiator Inferno review
PCsThe Gladiator Inferno is built with top-notch components, but it’s expensive
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The Gladiator Inferno is built with top-notch components, but it’s expensive
Powerful in its base specification and with upgrades to make it a monster PC, but we're not keen on the i5-Predator's monitor option
The Xeon processor is unusual and quick, but this PC is outclassed by same-priced rivals
It has plenty of extras, such as Wi-Fi and a Blu-ray drive, but it suffers from poor Windows performance
For undemanding users on a budget, this is a great-value choice
This is a great all-round entertainment PC, but it's not quite the best you can get for the money
Aria's choice of an AMD processor means it can add some interesting extras, but performance suffers, power drain is excessive, and the Edge10 monitor is disappointing
Aria has included some flashy features, such as an SSD for faster booting, but we’d have preferred a bigger monitor instead.
AMD Fusion is perfect for a media centre PC, but this little computer from Aria is a bit too big to fit the bill.
The budget AMD processor limits performance and it lacks a dedicated graphics card, but this is still one of the cheapest Blu-ray-equipped PCs available