Computer manufacturer Maingear has updated its Drift small form factor gaming system to support Nvidia's latest GeForce Titan X graphics card, assembled with processors up to the Intel Core i7-6950X.
The desktop price will start from $1,299, with the card itself worth a huge price of $1,200.
Apart from the processor and the GPU, the enhanced Drift gaming machine supports all Mini-ITX platforms including X99 and Z170. The device also supports up to 32GB of DDR4 memory, Samsung 950 Pro NVMe SSDs and Intel 750 Series, the company's full liquid cooling component, Epic Superstock and Redline CPU and GPU over-clocking.
The device can also be equipped with Windows 10 or open-source operating system of Valve Software, SteamOS, creating it as a certified Steam Machine.
If the users want the less expensive Drift configuration offered by the company, the lower setup consists of an Asus Z170I Pro motherboard supported with an Intel Core i3-6100 dual-core processor and with the cooling system of Maingear's Intel-certified cooler. The setup is also available with 8GB of HyperX Fury dual-channel DDR4 memory clocked at 2,666MHz, an AMD Radeon R7 360 graphics card with 2GB of on-board memory, as well as a 1TB hard drive from Seagate.
The most expensive composition of Maingear's four initial points starts at a meaty $4,399. This lowest configuration has an ASRock X99E-ITX motherboard packed with Intel Core i7-6800K six-core processor having a liquid-cooled feature, 8GB of HyperX Fury DDR4 dual-channel memory clocked at 2,666MHz, a graphics card of AMD's Radeon RX 480 with 8GB of on-board memory, as well as a 1TB hard drive provided by Seagate.
The Nvidia-based GPU consists of the GeForce GTX 1080 card with 8GB of on-board memory, and the GeForce GTX 1070, which is a Founders Edition with 8GB of on-board memory.
In terms of the AMD, options include the Radeon Pro Duo 8GB card in combination with the Radeon R9 Fury X 4GB card tuned for VR.
Nvidia's fresh Titan X graphics card, based on the company's latest Pascal architecture, is presently being provided as an option when assembling the Drift desktop. The graphic card consists of 3,584 CUDA cores with a base clock speed of 1,417MHz along with a boost clock speed of 1,531MHz.
The setup also features 12GB of GDDR5X memory, as well as a memory bandwidth of 480GB/second, a memory speed of 10 GB/second, with a 384-bit memory interface. It is the company's fastest card to date, cranking out 11 TFLOPs of sheer power.