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CyberPowerPC to raise prices on its gaming PCs because RAM prices have surged by 500%

Kosta Andreadis | Computer Systems | Nov 25, 2025 10:34 PM CST

CyberPowerPC is one of the biggest names in pre-built gaming PCs and laptops, making it easier for those who aren't keen on shopping for individual parts or building a PC from scratch. And with the company's Black Friday Sales offering savings on its range of systems and gear, it has taken to social media to confirm that, as of December 7, the prices for 'all systems' will increase due to market conditions.

CyberPowerPC to raise prices on its gaming PCs because RAM prices have surged by 500%

Due to memory (RAM) prices surging by 500% and even SSD prices rising by 100%, this has already impacted the cost of the PCs it has been building since October 2025. CyberPowerPC is making the announcement now to "remain fully transparent" with the PC gaming community and, given the timing so close to the holiday season, is aware it's "not ideal."

"Please know that CyberPowerPC will continue to strive to acquire the highest quality components at the best prices to ensure our customers continue to get top-performing systems with the best value on the market," the post concludes. Now, we're not posting this just to highlight that CyberPowerPC's system prices are about to increase, but also to warn that this may be indicative of a seismic wave of post-Black Friday Sales price increases set to hit the PC gaming market.

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Continue reading: CyberPowerPC to raise prices on its gaming PCs because RAM prices have surged by 500% (full post)

SK hynix to tease 48Gbps/24Gb GDDR7, 14.4Gbps LPDDR6 and Samsung 36GB HBM4 at ISSCC 2026

Anthony Garreffa | Artificial Intelligence | Nov 25, 2025 10:10 PM CST

The IEEE ISSCC 2026 conference kicks off in February 2026, where SK hynix and Samsung will be showing off their very latest GDDR7, LPDDR6, and HBM4 memory products.

SK hynix to tease 48Gbps/24Gb GDDR7, 14.4Gbps LPDDR6 and Samsung 36GB HBM4 at ISSCC 2026

In the list of sessions at ISSCC 2026 is "DRAM, SRAM, and Non-Volatile Memories" and just that section alone -- outside of the hundreds of topics and sessions across the 5 days, we have SK hynix presenting its 1cnm SRAM 16Gb LPDDR6 memory with 14.4Gbps per pin of bandwidth, and its new 48Gbps 24Gb modules of GDDR7 memory for "mid-range" inference AI performance.

Samsung on the other hand will be showing off its new 36GB HBM4 modules with 3.3TB/sec of bandwidth per channel, and its new 16Gb LPDDR6 memory with 12.8Gbps of bandwidth.

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Continue reading: SK hynix to tease 48Gbps/24Gb GDDR7, 14.4Gbps LPDDR6 and Samsung 36GB HBM4 at ISSCC 2026 (full post)

Epic Games CEO: RAM price increases a 'real problem for high-end gaming for several years'

Anthony Garreffa | RAM | Nov 25, 2025 9:36 PM CST

Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney has some words of reckoning in regards to skyrocketing RAM prices, where he says that they will be a "real problem" for the high-end gaming market for "several years" to come.

Epic Games CEO: RAM price increases a 'real problem for high-end gaming for several years'

We have all seen the explosive uptick in RAM prices over the last few weeks and months, with the AI race being blamed as companies are gobbling up as much high-end GPU technology it can, and all of them come with copious amounts of RAM (GDDR7 and HBM3, HBM3E, and HBM4).

Sweeney posted on X, where he said: "RAM price increases will be a real problem for high-end gaming for several years. Factories are diverting leading edge DRAM capacity to meet AI needs where data centers are bidding far higher than consumer device makers".

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Continue reading: Epic Games CEO: RAM price increases a 'real problem for high-end gaming for several years' (full post)

Notepad now lets you create tables, but is it one feature too many for this simple app?

Kosta Andreadis | Software & Apps | Nov 25, 2025 9:01 PM CST

Microsoft's Notepad is one of those simple legacy apps that has been around for decades. It has been a go-to app for countless Windows users because it offers fast and straightforward text-based editing and note-taking. That said, the Notepad in Windows 11 is a version of the app that has seen several functionality updates, including tab support, text formatting for links and headings, and AI-powered rewrite and summarize tools.

Notepad now lets you create tables, but is it one feature too many for this simple app?

As part of a new update available to Windows Insiders in the Canary and Dev Channels on Windows 11, Notepad (version 11.2510.6.0) now supports creating tables. The new option appears in the toolbar, and, in keeping with Notepad's lightweight, fast theme, it's a simple drop-down menu that lets you create a Table by selecting the number of rows and columns using a grid.

There's also some right-click functionality to add or remove rows and columns; however, the initial response to the update has been mixed, as the general feeling is that Notepad's basic text and note-taking functionality is what keeps it lightweight. And the more Notepad features Microsoft adds, the more it's going to lose sight of its original intention and become another unoptimized Windows app with too many unnecessary features.

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Continue reading: Notepad now lets you create tables, but is it one feature too many for this simple app? (full post)

Intel's answer to X3D cache on AMD CPU: 144MB of bLLC cache on next-gen Nova Lake desktop CPUs

Anthony Garreffa | Processors | Nov 25, 2025 6:55 PM CST

Intel is finally preparing to take on AMD's awesome X3D cache on its CPUs with next-gen Core Ultra 400K series "Nova Lake-S" desktop CPUs reportedly featuring 144MB of bLLC (big cache) as an answer to 3D V-Cache (X3D) on Ryzen X3D series CPUs.

Intel's answer to X3D cache on AMD CPU: 144MB of bLLC cache on next-gen Nova Lake desktop CPUs

The latest reports suggest that Intel will only include its bLLC cache on the next-gen Core Ultra 400K unlocked SKUs, while AMD still offers X3D cache across a far wider range of Ryzen CPUs. In a new post from leaker @Jaykihn, who says that the Core Ultra 400K series will feature 144MB of bLLC (Big Last Level Cache).

AMD has been using its X3D cache on mid-range Ryzen CPUs which cost under $500, to beat out much more expensive flagship CPUs from Intel without any pool of cache, meaning gamers could buy a far cheaper CPU and still have commanding gaming performance thanks to the X3D cache.

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Continue reading: Intel's answer to X3D cache on AMD CPU: 144MB of bLLC cache on next-gen Nova Lake desktop CPUs (full post)

New Xbox Ally feature automatically optimizes battery life and FPS with a toggle setting

Derek Strickland | Gaming | Nov 25, 2025 5:35 PM CST

The new ROG Xbox Ally handhelds will soon get an innovative new feature that automatically scales in-game performance to boost frame rates and battery life.

New Xbox Ally feature automatically optimizes battery life and FPS with a toggle setting

Microsoft and ASUS are introducing Default Game Profiles to the Xbox Ally and Xbox Ally X Windows PC handhelds. The new feature will natively optimize game software in such a way that prioritizes the fine balancing act of gameplay and power draw, leading to more fluid experiences that last longer while on-the-go. The setting has to be toggled within the Armoury Crate UI.

"Spend more time playing and less time fine-tuning. Default Game Profiles, available in preview starting today, automatically balance frame rate (FPS) and power consumption for 40 supported games at launch," Microsoft wrote on the Xbox Wire.

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Continue reading: New Xbox Ally feature automatically optimizes battery life and FPS with a toggle setting (full post)

Proton and Linux are 'vectors for cheat developers,' Rust dev Alistair McFarlane says

Derek Strickland | Gaming | Nov 25, 2025 4:34 PM CST

Rust developer Facepunch Studios reveals why the sim won't show up on Linux or be compatible on Valve's Proton, saying that the platform is a hotbed for cheating. This exposes some of the thinking around Valve and whether or not big online games with anti-cheat could show up on Valve's new Steam Machine.

Proton and Linux are 'vectors for cheat developers,' Rust dev Alistair McFarlane says

Valve's Steam Machine sounds great on paper: It'll be a small form-factor PC with a discrete GPU, a zippy CPU, and plenty of RAM--all wrapped in Valve's flexible and capable SteamOS. But there's just one issue: Anti-cheat. SteamOS is based on Linux, and Valve has developed a Proton compatibility layer to ensure Windows games run on SteamOS. Devs don't like to bring their games to Linux because of the uphill battle with anti-cheat on the platform--Linux is apparently a wild west frontier for cheating.

This could be a drawback for Valve's Steam Machine and give Microsoft's reported Windows-powered Xbox PC an upper edge. While Valve has added in anti-cheat support into Proton, including Easy Anti-Cheat, it's ultimately up to developers to do the work and enable the function and get any first-party toolsets working with Proton. That being said, Valve is still working closely with high-level developers and publishers to find solutions--and to hopefully ensure that big live service games can be played on Steam Machine.

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Continue reading: Proton and Linux are 'vectors for cheat developers,' Rust dev Alistair McFarlane says (full post)

DDR5 speed record broken yet again: Corsair Vengeance DDR5 breaks insane 13,530 MT/s barrier

Anthony Garreffa | RAM | Nov 25, 2025 4:04 PM CST

The DDR5 overclocking world record changes almost on the daily, with a new DDR5 speed record hit using Corsair Vengeance DDR5 memory and the GIGABYTE Z890 AORUS Tachyon ICE motherboard, and overclocker "Sergmann" with an incredible 13,530 MT/s speed.

DDR5 speed record broken yet again: Corsair Vengeance DDR5 breaks insane 13,530 MT/s barrier

Overclocker "SaltyCroissant" had achieved a new DDR5 world record earlier that day using CENS DDR5 memory at 13,322 MT/s, hitting 6703.9MHz or 13,407 MT/s using a single Corsair Vengeance 24GB DDR5 module on the GIGABYTE Z890 AORUS Tachyon ICE motherboard.

However, later that day, Sergmann reached a new record of 6765.2MHz or 13,530 MT/s for a new DDR5 OC world record, using the same Corsair Vengeance DDR5 memory and the same GIGABYTE Z890 AORUS Tachyon ICE motherboard. The only difference between the two overclockers' achievements is that SaltyCroissant used an Intel Core Ultra 5 265K processor, while Sergmann used the higher-end Core Ultra 9 285K processor.

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Continue reading: DDR5 speed record broken yet again: Corsair Vengeance DDR5 breaks insane 13,530 MT/s barrier (full post)

NVIDIA RTX 6000D made-for-China GPU: 84GB GDDR7, lower clocks, slower than RTX PRO 6000

Anthony Garreffa | Artificial Intelligence | Nov 25, 2025 3:19 PM CST

NVIDIA is cooking up a new China-exclusive GPU with the new RTX 6000D Blackwell GPU, recently tested on Geekbench and teases what is happening under the hood.

NVIDIA RTX 6000D made-for-China GPU: 84GB GDDR7, lower clocks, slower than RTX PRO 6000

The company has sliced the CUDA core count, VRAM capacity, and GPU clock speeds of its new RTX 6000D "Blackwell Pro for China" GPU. NVIDIA created the RTX 6000D after ever-increasing US export restrictions for AI hardware were imposed, with the RTX 6000D Blackwell GPU being a different SKU than the one available globally.

Inside, NVIDIA's new RTX 6000D GPU for China features 156 SMs or 19,968 CUDA cores, representing 17% less CUDA cores than the RTX PRO 6000, as well as less VRAM with 84GB of GDDR7 memory compared to 96GB GDDR7 on the full RTX PRO 6000. We should expect to see NVIDIA using 3GB GDDR7 memory modules on the RTX 6000D for China, indicating a 448-bit memory bus compared to the 512-bit memory bus on the RTX PRO 6000.

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Continue reading: NVIDIA RTX 6000D made-for-China GPU: 84GB GDDR7, lower clocks, slower than RTX PRO 6000 (full post)

Intel Core Ultra 9 386H 'Panther Lake' CPU loses to AMD's flagship Strix Halo APU in Geekbench

Anthony Garreffa | Processors | Nov 25, 2025 7:25 AM CST

Update: AMD reached out to us to inform us that this article had some incorrect information, with AMD telling me that Wccftech's story included "two sets of data" that were "mixed up". We've got some updated graphs that better compare AMD's "Strix Halo" APUs against Intel's new Core Ultra 386H "Panther Lake" CPU, with this article updated with that new information.

Intel Core Ultra 9 386H 'Panther Lake' CPU loses to AMD's flagship Strix Halo APU in Geekbench

Intel's upcoming Core Ultra 9 386H "Panther Lake" CPU has been benched early, still unable to beat AMD's flagship Strix Halo APU in Geekbench 6, but great single-core and multi-core performance against its other processor rivals.

Intel will officially unveil its new Core Ultra 300 series "Panther Lake" CPUs at CES 2026 in January, with plenty of leaks and information in the wild and in the links below. So far, we've been seeing engineering sample (ES) processors which don't usually run at retail CPU clock speeds, but now it looks like we've got some benchmarks from proper, closer to retail silicon.

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Continue reading: Intel Core Ultra 9 386H 'Panther Lake' CPU loses to AMD's flagship Strix Halo APU in Geekbench (full post)

Intel Core Ultra 290K Plus, 270K Plus, 250K Plus CPU leak: higher clocks, faster RAM supported

Anthony Garreffa | Processors | Nov 25, 2025 6:38 AM CST

Intel will be unveiling its new Arrow Lake-S Refresh CPUs in 2026, with some new details on the Core Ultra 200K Plus family of processors, and the new naming scheme that includes the Core Ultra 9 290K Plus, Core Ultra 7 270K Plus, and Core Ultra 5 250K Plus processors.

Intel Core Ultra 290K Plus, 270K Plus, 250K Plus CPU leak: higher clocks, faster RAM supported

We've been hearing rumors of Intel's new Arrow Lake-S Refresh processors for a while now, which should act as the last hurrah for the LGA-1851 socket before shifting to the new LGA-1954 socket for the launch of the next-gen Core Ultra 400 series "Nova Lake" desktop CPUs.

Intel's new Arrow Lake-S Refresh processors will include the tweaks and features that the Arrow Lake-S chips got in the form of special boost features and more, as well as some new surprises. The Core Ultra 9 290K Plus succeeds the Core Ultra 9 285K while keeping its 8P+16E CPU core configuration, but increases the Thermal Velocity Boost to 5.8GHz (up from 5.7GHz on the 285K). The E-Core turbo speeds also increase to 4.8GHz, while power limits remain the same at 125W base, and 250W max turbo TDP.

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Continue reading: Intel Core Ultra 290K Plus, 270K Plus, 250K Plus CPU leak: higher clocks, faster RAM supported (full post)

Steam is now a billion-dollar business for Sony and PlayStation

Kosta Andreadis | Gaming | Nov 25, 2025 12:33 AM CST

Sony has been slowly becoming more PC-focused with the release of its first- and second-party PlayStation Studios titles on Steam, and it's not hard to see why. According to a new report by Alinea Analytics, PlayStation Studios games released on Steam (PC gaming's number one platform) have generated $1.5 billion in revenue for Sony.

Steam is now a billion-dollar business for Sony and PlayStation

And even when you take out Valve's cut, that's still around $1.2 billion for Sony. With over 43 million games sold, the biggest seller for Sony isn't Marvel's Spider-Man, God of War, or Horizon Zero Dawn; it's Helldivers 2. And it's not even close, with Helldivers 2 reportedly selling 12.7 million copies on Steam, making it the most popular PlayStation Studios release on PC, with second-place going to Horizon Zero Dawn, which has sold 4.5 million copies.

Alinea Analytics notes that Helldiver 2's success on PC is Sony's first "megahit," with it selling over double the amount of copies on Steam as it did on PS5. Other big sellers on PC for Sony include God of War and Days Gone, which sold 4.2 million and 3.4 million copies, respectively.

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Continue reading: Steam is now a billion-dollar business for Sony and PlayStation (full post)

AMD to raise its Radeon RX 9000 Series GPU prices by at least 10%

Kosta Andreadis | Graphics Cards | Nov 24, 2025 11:59 PM CST

A new report seemingly confirms the rumors we've been hearing of late: AMD is set to increase the prices of its graphics cards by about 10% across its entire Radeon RX 9000 Series lineup. This is all due to rising memory costs across the industry, with demand far exceeding supply, driven by data centers and the AI market.

AMD to raise its Radeon RX 9000 Series GPU prices by at least 10%

According to the new report over at UDN (via Dan Nystedt on X), AMD has notified its partners of the price increase, which should take effect very soon or at the beginning of 2026. Everyone is affected because AMD and NVIDIA bundle GPU dies with GDDR memory when cards are sent to their AIB partners. This includes all of the companies making Radeon RX 9000 Series cards, including ASUS, ASRock, GIGABYTE, Sapphire, PowerColor, and others.

Even though AMD's Radeon RX 9000 Series cards, like the flagship Radeon RX 9070 XT, use GDDR6 memory rather than the newer GDDR7 found in the GeForce RTX 50 Series, the current memory crisis is reportedly affecting all sectors of the DRAM market. As we've seen in various reports, DRAM prices have increased by over 170% in the last couple of months.

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Continue reading: AMD to raise its Radeon RX 9000 Series GPU prices by at least 10% (full post)

ROG Matrix GeForce RTX 5090 tested: 26% higher power draw, 10% more performance

Kosta Andreadis | Graphics Cards | Nov 24, 2025 11:28 PM CST

ASUS's flagship and limited-edition ROG Matrix Platinum GeForce RTX 5090 not only looks impressive, but it's an RTX 5090 that can draw up to 800W of power via its 12V-2x6 connection, paired with ASUS's BTF high-power adapter. With liquid metal and vapor chamber cooling, four fans, and safety measures that include pin-sensing power monitoring and even angle detection to ensure a perfect 90-degree horizontal installation, it's a beast.

ROG Matrix GeForce RTX 5090 tested: 26% higher power draw, 10% more performance

And with that, YouTube creator and GPU specialist der8auer has put the ROG Matrix Platinum GeForce RTX 5090 through its paces, showing how it performs, and taken a closer look at its components and cooling in a detailed teardown.

As far as gaming performance goes, testing games like Star Wars Outlaws and Assassin's Creed Mirage shows that the ROG Matrix draws about 26% more power for about 10% more performance, bringing it closer to the RTX Pro 6000.

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Continue reading: ROG Matrix GeForce RTX 5090 tested: 26% higher power draw, 10% more performance (full post)

eXoWin9x lets you play over 650 Windows 95 and Windows 98 games from a single 262GB launcher

Kosta Andreadis | Gaming | Nov 24, 2025 10:57 PM CST

If you grew up playing PC games on DOS and operating systems like Windows 95 and Windows 98, then here's an early present for the holiday season - eXoWin9x Vol. 1. A single pack available to download that includes 662 fully emulated games from 1994 through to 1996, released during the era where Windows went 32-bit and became the go-to operating system for PC.

eXoWin9x lets you play over 650 Windows 95 and Windows 98 games from a single 262GB launcher

The list of games included in the 263GB package includes well-known classics like DOOM II, MechWarrior 2, Myst, SimCity 2000, Heroes of Might and Magic, Quake, Wing Commander IV, and the original Diablo. Still, it's chock-full of forgotten classics and lesser-known games you might recall from the era. Titles like Spycraft - The Great Game, SimGolf, Rally Racers, Phantasmagoria, and several other multimedia-enhanced games from the CD-ROM era, as well as rare releases no longer available on any platform.

It's an impressive collection with a detailed front-end that includes information and goodies for each game, including cover art, manuals, soundtracks, and other materials. Everything is pre-configured with a simple setup process, and every game runs in a virtual machine from a single launcher, so there's no need to configure or modify your existing system.

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Continue reading: eXoWin9x lets you play over 650 Windows 95 and Windows 98 games from a single 262GB launcher (full post)

Intel's next-gen Nova Lake desktop CPU: NPU6 with 74 TOPS of AI power, 1.5x over Panther Lake

Anthony Garreffa | Processors | Nov 24, 2025 10:10 PM CST

Intel's next-generation Core Ultra 400 series "Nova Lake" desktop processors will feature a next-gen NPU6 chip, offering 1.5x the AI performance inside of the upcoming "Panther Lake" desktop chips with NPU5 coming in early 2026.

Intel's next-gen Nova Lake desktop CPU: NPU6 with 74 TOPS of AI power, 1.5x over Panther Lake

In a new post on X from leaker @jaykihn0, we're hearing Nova Lake desktop CPUs will feature an upgraded NPU6 design for higher AI performance, whether consumers want/need it or not. NPU3 is inside of the "Arrow Lake-S" desktop processors from Intel that launched in 2023, the same NPU inside of "Meteor Lake" chips for laptops, while NPU5 inside of "Panther Lake" next year will top out at 50 TOPS of AI performance.

We knew that Nova Lake would feature an NPU for the desktop, and that it would (obviously) be faster, but now we have some firmer details from leaks that NPU6 will feature 74 TOPS of INT8 performance for AI workloads, a significant upgrade over the 50 TOPS from Panther Lake.

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Continue reading: Intel's next-gen Nova Lake desktop CPU: NPU6 with 74 TOPS of AI power, 1.5x over Panther Lake (full post)

It's official: 64GB of DDR5-6000 RAM now costs way more than a PlayStation 5 console

Anthony Garreffa | RAM | Nov 24, 2025 9:09 PM CST

You can buy an entire PlayStation 5 console for less than what a 64GB kit of DDR5-6000 memory would cost you, and it's only going to get worse.

It's official: 64GB of DDR5-6000 RAM now costs way more than a PlayStation 5 console

The RAM shortage is being blamed on the AI boom, which is consuming as much of the best DRAM memory chips it can, increasing the price of DDR5 memory and DDR5 memory kits for the PC. It's gotten to the point that a $205-$220 memory kit from a few months ago -- the G.SKILL Trident Z5 Neo RGB series 64GB DDR5-6000 memory kit -- now costs $599, and that's with some discount applied.

Looking at the tracking data of DDR5 RAM prices, you could get a 64GB DDR5 memory kit for just $140, but now 64GB kits are $500+ in the last couple of months. Sony has its PlayStation 5 Digital console priced at $399, and the Microsoft Xbox Series S also at $399, while the PS5 Slim Disc costs $449, and the more powerful PS5 Pro costs $649.

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Continue reading: It's official: 64GB of DDR5-6000 RAM now costs way more than a PlayStation 5 console (full post)

NVIDIA's monster RTX PRO 6000 workstation GPU with 96GB GDDR7 drops to $7999, down from $10K

Anthony Garreffa | Graphics Cards | Nov 24, 2025 8:01 PM CST

NVIDIA's expensive RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Workstation GPU has received its own Black Friday deal on Newegg, reducing its pricing from $9299 down to $7999, with the card rocking 96GB of GDDR7 memory.

NVIDIA's monster RTX PRO 6000 workstation GPU with 96GB GDDR7 drops to $7999, down from $10K

In a current market where RAM prices are absolutely skyrocketing out of control, the 96GB card has a decent 13% price discount on Newegg right now, down to $7999. NVIDIA launched the new RTX PRO 6000 earlier this year for at least $8500, and some places charging up to $11,000 for it, while sitting at around $9000 on average.

This isn't a GPU that people would buy for gaming, but rather customers who are after the NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 -- even with its discount down to $7999 -- would be servers, AI companies, and the enterprise. You could install multiple RTX PRO 6000 cards into a system for massive performance increases across the board, with 384GB of GDDR7 memory through the four cards installed, with 2400W power consumption total (4 x 600W).

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Continue reading: NVIDIA's monster RTX PRO 6000 workstation GPU with 96GB GDDR7 drops to $7999, down from $10K (full post)

Xbox Full Screen Experience is now available for all Windows 11 PCs

Kosta Andreadis | Gaming | Nov 24, 2025 7:31 PM CST

Microsoft's Xbox Full Screen Experience (or FSE) for Windows 11 debuted with the ROG Xbox Ally gaming handhelds last month, marking the first time the OS delivers a console-like, controller-friendly experience for gamers. With XBE now rolling out to more Windows 11 gaming handhelds, Microsoft is also making it available to Windows 11 Insiders to test out and use on any laptop or PC.

Xbox Full Screen Experience is now available for all Windows 11 PCs

The big feature is the ability to boot straight into the Xbox app and interface for a smoother, faster gaming experience. By booting straight into the Xbox app, which still gives you access to other storefronts like Steam and the Epic Game Store, the FSE also disables unneeded non-essential and non-gaming Windows 11 processes to free up system resources and memory.

"Designed for controller-first navigation, it provides a gaming-first, full-screen environment where players can easily browse and launch titles from across their game libraries- including most popular PC storefronts," Microsoft explains, "A powerful Task Switcher enables quick movement between games and apps, delivering a seamless experience."

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Continue reading: Xbox Full Screen Experience is now available for all Windows 11 PCs (full post)

Far Cry anthology TV series announced at FX Networks

Derek Strickland | TV, Movies & Home Theatre | Nov 24, 2025 6:36 PM CST

The reports were true: A Far Cry TV series is indeed on the way, and It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia co-creator Rob Mac will star in the show.

Far Cry anthology TV series announced at FX Networks

Today, FX announced that it has greenlit a new anthology TV series based around Ubisoft's best-selling Far Cry franchise. The show is the brainchild of It's Always Sunny co-creator Rob Mac and Alien: Earth director Noah Hawley, and will air on Hulu.

Ubisoft's Far Cry social account didn't reveal specifics about the show itself, however Variety confirms that each season will tell a different story with different characters. The Far Cry show won't be an anthology series like Twilight Zone where each episode is different, but instead be similar to the likes of American Horror Story.

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Continue reading: Far Cry anthology TV series announced at FX Networks (full post)

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