Build-A-Rig Round 1: The Conclusion

When we set out with our inaugural Build-A-Rig Challenge a few months ago, besides defining the challenge as a $1500 gaming PC we left the rules purposely vague in order to give our competitors as much latitude as possible in their system builds. We did this in hopes of getting some wide variety in designs, least all of our competitors gravitate towards the same types builds. Excitingly, between Zotac and Corsair we received significantly different builds, meaning that we have two very distinct systems to give away this week.

As far as performance goes for today’s showdown, the Corsair system is the clear leader, as we had expected based on our earlier interviews and design goals. While both systems include a Core i5 processor, the Corsair build includes a faster (and overclocking-capable) version of the processor, and augments that with one of the fastest video cards currently available, the GeForce GTX 980 Ti. As a result in both CPU and GPU scenarios Corsair’s The Accelerator has a distinct lead, one necessary to hit the kind of 4K gaming that Corsair was shooting for in this build.

Which is not to say that Zotac’s Hey Good Lookin’ is a slouch. At 1440p the Core i5 and GTX 970 combination tends to do the job well – only occasionally having to drop back to 1080p – it’s just not going to keep up with Corsair’s build. Otherwise the one area with respect to performance that Corsair doesn’t lead is in storage performance, where the Crucial BX100 SSD gives Zotac’s system a slight edge.

The flip side to this is that the Corsair system draws more power, an unescapable result of its greater performance thanks to featuring more powerful processors. This gives Zotac’s build an edge on power consumption, and thanks in part to that and the use of a larger closed loop liquid cooler, the Zotac system operates at lower temperatures as well.

Otherwise the last area where the two systems differ isn’t just by how cool they are, but how cool they look. As we briefly described in the introduction, and as alluded to by the name Hey Good Lookin’, Zotac has gone for a greater emphasis on design and looks, over the quintessential black-box design of Corsair’s build. While for many gamers performance will be the greatest concern, we really like that Zotac has thrown us a curveball here by focusing on aesthetics. Windowed cases, LED lighting, and other decorative elements actually sell rather well in the PC space – showing off your system at a LAN party is an art in and of itself – so gamers looking for a good gaming PC that can also look good will probably find Zotac’s build more to their liking.

And with that, we wrap up the first round of the Build-A-Rig Challenge. The systems have been speced, built, and tested, and now all that remains is for many of you what will be the most fun part of this series, the giveaway. Today is the final day to enter the Build-A-Rig Round 1 giveaway, so be sure to submit your entry before midnight tonight in order to earn a chance to win either The Accelerator or Hey Good Lookin’.

Finally, we’d like to once again thank our competitors for this round, Corsair and Zotac, for taking part in this new giveaway by helping us to come up with the systems we’re giving away. And of course a big thank you to Newegg for supplying the parts for each system.

Join us later this month for the start of Round 2, where we’ll be asking our next group of competitors to spec out some exciting Small Form Factor PCs that are a bit lighter on the wallet in the process.

Power Consumption and Thermal Performance
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  • Refuge - Monday, August 10, 2015 - link

    It is down to perspective in the end.

    I like LED strips if done properly. I also thought the Zotac build was very pretty.
  • Mikemk - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    So will the winners be announced publicly?
  • Ryan Smith - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    That's a good question. Our corporate parent technically executes the contest, so I'll check with them on the matter.
  • Drumsticks - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    These are cool! I hope you do them well into the future, it's exciting to see what the companies come up with and some friendly competition is always fun to watch.

    I'd love to see Dustin/future people who add unlocked CPUs to their builds have them tested with an overclock added by y'all - after all, it's a huge benefit and the CPU performance advantage for Corsair here is kind of understated without it.

    Either way, no surprises with the results. Both builds did what people really expected; nobody saw Zotac winning many performance runs, but then again, they weren't really trying to with their picks.
  • Gasaraki88 - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    I don't get what the point of this article is. You take a computer that has a slower processor and video card and compare it to one that has a faster processor and video card. OK, guess who's slower?
  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    It's part of our give-a-way contest project called Build-A-Rig. We give two companies a budget and ask them to spec down a rig. We then interview them about the industry and what they chose, and then we get the parts from our partner Newegg, build the systems, test them, and then give them away to our readers.

    Read the intro: http://www.anandtech.com/show/9403/
    Read the interviews and specification breakdowns: http://www.anandtech.com/show/9417/
    Read the build logs for each system: http://www.anandtech.com/show/9474/

    And this performance analysis is the final piece of the puzzle.
  • doggface - Sunday, August 9, 2015 - link

    When I first saw that h100i in the zotac build it didnt make sense. Using it to blow away the heat from the 970 is clever.
  • zerockslol - Saturday, August 15, 2015 - link

    Anyone else notice the inconsistency with prices in the 90 day average?
    I added up the 90 day averages and it reached $1512.72 you're welcome
  • zerockslol - Saturday, August 15, 2015 - link

    that was for Zotacs btw
  • Legionosh - Monday, August 17, 2015 - link

    While the Zoltac may look a little better, I'd much prefer the Corsair build due purely to performance reasons. The power consumption difference is nowhere near enough to warrant the performance difference in my opinion (and everyone has their own opinion).

    Granted the SSD does offer some performance benefits, but the difference in GPU and CPU performance more than makes up the difference for me. :-)

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