Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Gaming
  4. Virtual Reality
  5. News

Xotic PC just dropped a metric ton of VR Ready desktops and laptops

Add as a preferred source on Google

With both the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive now on the market, there’s obviously no better time than the present to drop a motherload of VR Ready PCs, and that’s exactly what gaming computer maker slash reseller Xotic PC has opted to do today.

Employing Nvidia’s GeForce GTX VR Ready graphics tech, every one of these rigs can handle VR games in their 360-degree glory even when personalized at the base level. For all five desktop options, built by Xotic itself, that means an Intel Skylake i5-6500 CPU, an Nvidia GTX 970, 8GB of DDR4 RAM, and a 1TB hard drive. For mobile systems from MSI and Sager, this means a sixth-gen i7-6700 CPU, an Nvidia GTX 980, up to 64GB of RAM, and a 1TB hard drive.

Recommended Videos

The advantage of buying from Xotic as opposed to other retailers or manufacturers, the company’s CEO Justin Nolte told Digital Trends, is in its “ability to completely customize every system we sell.”

“We’re not pushing cookie-cutter PCs where one size fits all,” he said. “Rather, we offer a wide range of both performance and visual customization options that gamers demand.”

In other words, Xotic PC essentially lets customers build their own gaming PCs, virtually, on demand. And while other PC retailers are doing exactly the same thing, Nolte promises that his company is different because of its “top-notch ratings” in customer support.

“Our performance options — liquid cooling, RAM choices, SSD drives, CPU overclocking, etc. — ensure you’ll have the horsepower to handle VR-based entertainment for years to come,” Nolte went on, “while our aesthetic customizations — carbon dipping, custom paint jobs, etching, custom system wraps, and many others — ensure you have a laptop or PC that’s branded as ‘yours.'”

While the desktop offerings are expensive, with the cheapest option — the Exodus Mini — starting at $1,429, they do appear capable, and are able to support highly demanding VR tech which is a feat in its own right. Unfortunately, the laptops Xotic is selling are less than stellar in terms of battery life, which is advertised as being “2+ hours” long.

Nolte’s defense for this is that “with any high-performance hardware, you’re going to see extra drain on the battery life.” That’s for certain, but why even buy a laptop if it would barely survive long enough to complete Gone Home?

“That said,” he continued, “there have also been increases in battery life, and tools to maximize battery output. The simplest way to increase battery life, of course, is to lower performance when battery life is needed — and all our mobile gaming PCs have technology built in to make that as easy and accessible as possible for those times when you’re not plugged into AC power.”

Lastly, Nolte explained that Xotic’s VR Ready lineup is “future-proof” because the company is confident that the systems will be “immersing you in virtual worlds now and in the foreseeable future.”

If you’re confident in Xotic PC’s ability to deliver on the VR Ready promise, you can examine its selections for yourself here.

Gabe Carey
A freelancer for Digital Trends, Gabe Carey has been covering the intersection of video games and technology since he was 16…
Asus reveals ROG Strix XG129C, a tiny secondary monitor chasing Elgato’s gamer lunch
The secondary display category has been waiting for a product that combines a proper screen, real color accuracy, and gaming ecosystem integration in one tidy package.
Strix XG129C secondary display.

If you’ve ever wished your work desk had a dedicated screen for reviewing your system’s performance, chat windows, or streaming controls, so that you don’t have to disturb your main monitor, Asus has heard you. 

The ROG Strix XG129C is a 12.3-inch secondary display with a touchscreen, designed to sit beneath your primary monitor and handle everything that could be a distraction on your main screen, and it costs $199. 

Read more
Intel’s turnaround is one for the ages, without having much to show for it
Wall Street is betting big on Intel before the results arrive
Logo

Intel’s comeback has become one of the market’s biggest surprises. Its stock has risen nearly 490% over the past year, pushing the company back into record territory and reviving confidence in a chipmaker many had written off.

The problem is that Intel still has little product success to justify that excitement.

Read more
Apple’s Continuity features are so good, they make Windows and Android feel incomplete
Android and Windows try, but Apple's ecosystem is on a whole different level.
Mac iPad iPhone with blurred background

Windows and Android platforms have been trying to catch up to Apple's ecosystem. And honestly, in some areas, they have succeeded. But replicating a feature here and there is very different from pulling off what Apple has built. The seamless, almost invisible way all of Apple's devices work together is genuinely hard to replicate.

Apple calls these Continuity features. You can use these features to seamlessly transition from one device to another, unlock devices without entering passwords, transfer files, and much more. 

Read more