The Skytech Shiva 2 gaming PC, aptly named after the Supreme Being Shiva the Destroyer. With a core component combo like this and enough oomph in the supporting spec to back up that fury, the name starts to make a lot of sense.
Packed into this shining white case is a last-gen Intel gaming chip and one of the heartier entries into Nvidia's current generation lineup of Ada GPUs, the RTX 4070.
The Intel Core i5 12400F is basically the same Core i5 12400 we tested—and scored a whopping 95—last year. The only difference is this one comes without the iGPU. That means if you ignore the inevitable arrow sticker on the back and plug your gaming monitor straight into the motherboard, you'll get nothing. Or, if your plan is to nab a cheap u31 ทางเข้า gaming PC and pilfer the GPU to sell on, you'll need a backup to get anything to actually display.
Otherwise, the RTX 4070 has shown no ounce of faltering in our testing, even at 4K it rips through frames like u31 เข้าสู่ระบบ there's no tomorrow. And when Skytech has backed it up with a whole-ass terabyte of NVMe storage, you'll actually be able to download a lot of those large, graphically intensive games you're obsessing over right now.
Granted the storage is likely to be a little slower than some on the market, but these are the sacrifices we have to make to get cheap-but-good gaming PCs. It has been this way for generations.
