MSI Pre-Built Bends SSDs & Boils CPUs at 100°C ($1700 Aegis R Review)

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • The MSI Aegis R pre-built PC is one of the worst systems we've ever looked at. It's impressive how MSI combined software and hardware incompetence to create this abomination.
    Sponsor: Buy Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut paste on Amazon (geni.us/JMVNtOE) or Hydronaut paste for water cooling (Amazon - geni.us/Fsray)
    Watch our pre-built PC reviews playlist: • Pre-Built Gaming PC Re...
    The HP Pavilion TG01 that we didn’t like was better than this MSI Oven: • Embarrassingly Bad: HP...
    The ABS Challenger remains a stand-out: • Best Pre-Built So Far:...
    Support our pre-built PC buying habits by grabbing a toolkit, anti-static PC building modmat, or 3D component coaster pack on the GN store! store.gamersnexus.net/
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    TIMESTAMPS
    00:00 - MSI Aegis R Review
    02:44 - Tearing Down Something Almost OK
    05:35 - Component Selection in the Aegis R
    10:38 - Poor Little NVME SSD
    12:32 - Catastrophic Thermals
    15:31 - Gaming Performance: Cyberpunk 2077
    16:54 - Red Dead Redemption 2 Benchmarks
    17:08 - Rainbow Six Siege (1080p & 1440p)
    18:13 - Power (Blender & Gaming)
    19:21 - Setup & Instructions
    21:10 - XP-Era Bloatware
    25:28 - Conclusion
    ** Please like, comment, and subscribe for more! **
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    Host, Writing, Test Lead: Steve Burke
    Testing, Writing: Patrick Lathan
    Video: Keegan Gallick, Andrew Coleman
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Komentáře • 2,5K

  • @GamersNexus
    @GamersNexus  Před 2 lety +264

    Support our pre-built PC buying habits by grabbing a toolkit, anti-static PC building modmat, or 3D component coaster pack on the GN store! store.gamersnexus.net/
    Watch our pre-built PC reviews playlist: czcams.com/play/PLsuVSmND84QuM2HKzG7ipbIbE_R5EnCLM.html
    The HP Pavilion TG01 that we didn’t like was better than this MSI Oven: czcams.com/video/4OZGmWZyhac/video.html
    The ABS Challenger remains a stand-out: czcams.com/video/b2vrvQydVIw/video.html

    • @Paraclef
      @Paraclef Před 2 lety

      At least, you know that you can not go and meet msi, or they are going to push you, from the top of a skyscraper.

    • @MARTINRIGGSS
      @MARTINRIGGSS Před 2 lety +2

      Just a heads up. There’s a 1 month old account named “pinned by gamer nexus” that’s spamming some BS link.
      Edit: to clarify. The comment I replied too (this one) is NOT the spam account. I was reading comments and kept seeing a “pinned by GN” replying with a whats app number.

    • @josebr0
      @josebr0 Před 2 lety

      Look, since you guys are not going to like any prebuilts anyway, why not starting a business where you mount and sell your own? You guys certainly have the knowledge to do so and even some contacts in china. Plus, you have the youtube channel to advertise it.

    • @IamMarkSmith
      @IamMarkSmith Před 2 lety +1

      I have the ZS. The less expensive AMD-equipped version of this with the grill intake in place of the glass. Their less expensive prebuilt is better than the more expensive one. I replaced the MOBO, CPU, and added a GPU as I bought it last Summer from someone who bought it just to take out the GPU off of eBay for around $550.00. It runs like a champ after my upgrades. I am running an MSI MAG B500M Mortar Wifi, AMD 3800 XT CPU, 64GB Crucial DDR4-3200 CL16 ram, MSi A850GF PSU, and an MSI RTX 3070 Ti Gaming X Trio.

    • @kendallguier1378
      @kendallguier1378 Před 2 lety +1

      I love the peel bait

  • @MafiaboysWorld
    @MafiaboysWorld Před 2 lety +3796

    Ahh, the "It's Better Than Dell" series. On this episode, MSI shows us that it can build a computer and BBQ in the one unit. 😁👍

    • @First-Name_Last-Name
      @First-Name_Last-Name Před 2 lety +131

      IIRC, the word "Aegis" is a shield usually associated with Athena/Zeus .
      At least the case works as the "Aegis" name implies: It shields all the inner parts from airflow.

    • @captainsniffsnarf
      @captainsniffsnarf Před 2 lety +28

      Its bios makes it worse than dell. Dell has proprietary board and bios that's just weird but kinda works, This is just a friggen 350watt silicone fuse/heater, best case you part it out and reflash the mobo and scrap the case, similar to ibuypower.

    • @MafiaboysWorld
      @MafiaboysWorld Před 2 lety +20

      @@captainsniffsnarf Yeah, any prebuilt is part of the "It's better than Dell" series as I call it. Whether it passes or fails is up to you. In this case, it passes because it can also cook a brisket inside the case in 4hrs. 🤣👍

    • @literallyhuman5990
      @literallyhuman5990 Před 2 lety +8

      I ain't buy that for my BBQ my old grill cost less than an MSI PC

    • @ftwtech
      @ftwtech Před 2 lety +9

      You can’t discount the KFConsole though👀

  • @iancalandro8180
    @iancalandro8180 Před 2 lety +558

    Msi: "OH we'll just mess with the software so it won't say it's thermal throttling. They'll never know."
    Steve: "I know."

  • @thedarkness6734
    @thedarkness6734 Před 2 lety +1162

    Thank you so much for reviewing this and warning everyone. I bought one of these unfortunately - there were a few limitations to what I could buy, long story. Has a 10700k and RTX 3090. When it arrived, the CPU jumped to 100 C with any task. I took the PC apart and found the "Please Remove Before Install" sticker still on the water cooler block (I have pics...). Took that off, repasted, temps improved, but not great. Found the same problem you found - the BIOS settings were pushing it to maximum clock without fail. Tweaked, temps again improved, but not great. I pulled off the front panel, temps were much better. I contacted MSI and bought the mesh equivalent of the front panel (from the Gungnir 111M or something similar). Temps were finally manageable. Then the computer started crashing consistently during every machine learning or gaming session. Turns out the 750W PSU could not handle the power spikes from the 3090. MSI tried to replace the PSU with the same one - same problem. I got sick of it and replaced it with a much better 1200 W one. After all that, my CPU temps returned to 100C. Realized the water cooler was no longer pushing water. Replaced that... Now I finally have a working computer, months and hundreds of dollars later.

    • @pogtuber5146
      @pogtuber5146 Před 2 lety +272

      Jesus christ.

    • @starwinter6845
      @starwinter6845 Před 2 lety +84

      So sorry. I had almost a year of fights with MSI over a motherboard of theirs that I replaced three times, each taking over a month to replace, and the board killing ALL MY OTHER PARTS, before calling it quits and spending over $400 on a new board by Asus. MSI is just a shit company overall and that board was the first and only product I'll ever buy from them.

    • @spasiklakigaming5075
      @spasiklakigaming5075 Před 2 lety +5

      @@starwinter6845 I have a B450 TOMAHAWK good thing it didn't ever act up (I have this machine for like a year, DIY)

    • @EliasOwnage95
      @EliasOwnage95 Před 2 lety +38

      God bless your patience lmao

    • @pogtuber5146
      @pogtuber5146 Před 2 lety +4

      @@starwinter6845 I bought the tomahawk and it's awesome but I think that was what they made after their terrible motherboard fiasco from an earlier generation

  • @pcbuilderlover4271
    @pcbuilderlover4271 Před 2 lety +711

    MSI took "Compress this drive to save space" to a new level!

    • @waldolemmer
      @waldolemmer Před 2 lety +28

      > MSI took disk compression to a new level
      I think that's a funnier way to word it, just a suggestion

    • @gp3000000
      @gp3000000 Před 2 lety +10

      ​@@waldolemmer "Compress this drive to save space" was the exact wording of this feature in WIndows XP which is what I think he was going for, the question is did anyone actually use it?

    • @tommymoore9443
      @tommymoore9443 Před 2 lety

      @@gp3000000 It works great for storage drives (Meaning less used drives).

    • @MrNukealizer
      @MrNukealizer Před 2 lety +1

      @@tommymoore9443 Unfortunately, basically everything I'd ever want to store is already in a compressed format so that does nothing but slow it down.

    • @shanez1215
      @shanez1215 Před rokem +2

      @@gp3000000 I am because Acer thought it was acceptable to ship a Windows 10 laptop in 2018 with just THIRTY-TWO GIGABYTES OF STORAGE.
      I have to do an in-place upgrade with a USB to even update it lmao because it doesn't even have enough space to download the update files

  • @BlindBison
    @BlindBison Před 2 lety +543

    The lack of quality control on prebuilt PCs is just astounding.

    • @Mihoshika
      @Mihoshika Před 2 lety +11

      You just have to buy from the right places. NZXT has pretty good stuff, though airflow in cases could be better. Got a PC w/ 3070 Ti, 5900x for 1900 about 6 months ago. It's been running like a charm, though I did have to turn up fan curve, especially on GPU.

    • @myrealusername2193
      @myrealusername2193 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Mihoshika yeah, the one case I’ve bought from them was the h510 Flow because I was afraid of bad airflow, it’s been fine since.
      I’ve been thinking about getting an h1 v2 for my next upgrade, and I’ve already decided if I do I’m adding on more fans.
      NZXT is just not great for anything other than looks and build quality (and the last one only very slightly). Plus a lot of people don’t like how their products look.

    • @willydilly9020
      @willydilly9020 Před 2 lety +23

      @time is near what kind of weird cult shit is this.

    • @ManGrieves
      @ManGrieves Před 2 lety +7

      Pretty sure the quality control on actual diy pcs aren’t any better than this.. and with so many opportunities to screw things up for the average person this is likely a step up

    • @ViolentMLG
      @ViolentMLG Před 2 lety +17

      As someone who runs a small pre-built PC company, I like watching these videos to educate myself, and I can say allot of these errors I ensure aren't made, and for large OEM's, I think allot of this is cost cutting/simply not caring.
      The biggest one that stood out to me on this review was the 100C on the CPU, we test all products, CPU, GPU, Ram, max load prior to shipping out a system, if it has temp issues, we notice immediately.
      The last thing you want is a customer returning the product because its lagging, trashing your business in reviews, calling you a scammer, etc etc, its not worth it.
      When it comes to immediate throttles, those things show themselves within minutes, its the last piece in the process to make sure the build was done correctly, not sure how OEM's miss this or even allow a system to ship with the ability to thermal throttle.
      I know these companies are making BANK compared to what I do on each system with all their pre-installed bloat non-sense, wholesale discounts, etc etc.
      There is no excuse for systems to come out with issues like this.
      Even if you wanted to blame employees, its still their fault at the end of the day, my employees understand I'm a perfectionist, and each system will be perfect, people aren't paying for amateur to build their stuff, if they were, they could do it themselves.
      At the end of the day though, marketing and money speak way more than your product, any decent business person knows that.

  • @darkzak47
    @darkzak47 Před 2 lety +895

    Steve, after buying my last computer pre-built four years ago, I ultimately decided to finally learn how to build a PC. There’s no question I’ve made more than a few mistakes pricewise, but in the end I’m sure that the last two computers I’ve put together for my kids and my wife, combined, were cheaper than any pre-built I’ve ever bought previously.
    Not to mention it’s very satisfying when you hit that power button and it posts. I’ve learned a lot from watching your channel as well as Jay and Paul.
    To all new builders out there, it’s not as hard as you think! If I can do it anyone can

    • @deli8871
      @deli8871 Před 2 lety +56

      Once the good parts start to go down in price im sure more people will get into building computers

    • @justinzhu8453
      @justinzhu8453 Před 2 lety +4

      thats really cool to hear! my prebuilt is nearly 4 years old now as well, and I'm planing to build my own computer to fit my demands. All the midrange prebuilts are a hit and miss, so it'll be much more reliable to build it myself.

    • @buggiesindustries7550
      @buggiesindustries7550 Před 2 lety +5

      Oh dear, looks like Steve has a copycat here 🤔
      Time to see if the spam report works on CZcams

    • @GamersNexus
      @GamersNexus  Před 2 lety +273

      I love that last sentence and hope it encourages anyone afraid to try PC DIY to try it!

    • @Xamy-
      @Xamy- Před 2 lety +4

      @@GamersNexus -how come you pinned the fake Chinese (assuming because of WhatsApp) bot account? That will just confuse viewers-
      Ignore, just trickery and mobile woes

  • @shana_dmr
    @shana_dmr Před 2 lety +517

    It's so baffling that company that actually has enough R&D to manufacture their own hardware couldn't figure out how to assemble few off the shelf parts competently.

    • @syncmonism
      @syncmonism Před 2 lety +40

      IKR? How did they screw it up this badly?! There's apparently nothing wrong with any of the components (except for the case), and many of these components are actually pretty good, and yet somehow they managed to find a way to make the system terrible, and in a way which goes beyond just having bad case ventilation.

    • @georgepaul1613
      @georgepaul1613 Před 2 lety +13

      I think they make these to get rid of old stock

    • @jlurenzjr
      @jlurenzjr Před rokem +29

      Remember MSI is a company of hundreds. With very smart engineers that manufacture these components BUT the guy who built this computer and the guy who did the software setup (sometimes the same) is a poorly paid dude who works in a warehouse all day. Some care about their work quality some don’t just like every company in the world. The important thing is wether or not they fix the issues awesome people like this show the world.

    • @michaelf.2449
      @michaelf.2449 Před rokem

      @@jlurenzjr no real way to "fix" these issues unless the person who bought the computer is familiar with tech enough to just nuke all the software and start again new.

    • @timweber4318
      @timweber4318 Před rokem +1

      @@syncmonism Speaking off cases...
      I have an NZXT H210i
      And tzhe front panel is just a solid piece, so I thought it is bad for the temps... but it isn't.
      It's a mini itx case and i have powerful hardware etc. (and a terrible thermal paste job on the CPU, long story lol) but.... it doesn't matter if the Front panel is on or not.
      How? Like how does it get enough air? The case in the video has an issue with this, the 210i has literally a solid plate as a front panel. It only can suck in air through two abgout 2.5cm wide stripes next to the intake fans and from the bottom below the front panel since it's completely open there and even made wider, probably to suck in air...
      Like why does it work? It makes no sense to me, the total area can't be that much larger in my case then in the one in the video?

  • @Andrew-hg1em
    @Andrew-hg1em Před 2 lety +165

    Rookie mistake installing an M.2 heatsink on top of one of those Adata M.2s.
    They come with an aluminum heatspreader installed from factory (which is very difficult to remove due to an adhesive thermal pad being used), that adds height and most motherboard included heatsinks will crush it even if not tightened all the way.
    This is worse than just over-tightening, it's reckless and could cost the customer time and money should it kill the part.

    • @LiberatedMind1
      @LiberatedMind1 Před 2 lety +9

      Not to mention lost data.

    • @QuickSpermCell
      @QuickSpermCell Před rokem

      I got that PC are you saying I should remove the heatsink?

    • @narottamakarunanidhi1731
      @narottamakarunanidhi1731 Před rokem

      Uhh sorry for late reply but i bought a kingston fury renegade ssd and it came with a heat spreader, i removed the spreader and installed a heatsink on it and noticed a nice heat decrease. So did i do a bad thing? The ssd is working perfectly fine though, crystaldiskmark said its reading and writing at 7gb/s so its normal.

  • @pladimirvutin3332
    @pladimirvutin3332 Před 2 lety +168

    I work for a small computer repair shop and recently had one of these come in. They forgot to take the plastic sticker (that says "please remove before mounting") off the bottom of the cpu cooler and it cooked the cpu. Brilliant.

    • @dashcamandy2242
      @dashcamandy2242 Před 2 lety +3

      🤦‍♂

    • @pjavilla
      @pjavilla Před 2 lety +3

      If it was a prebuilt I'd blame the shop where they bought it. Users are clueless, the shop should've reminded them of simple stuff like that. They're buying a damn prebuilt, it goes without saying that user probably doesn't know how computers work and was likely afraid of messing with it and breaking something.
      Just a short reminder would've been sufficient. "When you get home and connect it to your mouse/keyboard/monitor, please also remember to remove this sticker."

    • @timothygibney159
      @timothygibney159 Před 2 lety +1

      Lol

    • @TheSjuris
      @TheSjuris Před 2 lety +49

      @@pjavilla I would hope that a prebuilt computer manufacturer didn’t expect the consumer to mount the hardware for them otherwise what’s the actual point?

    • @jacogeldenhuys6280
      @jacogeldenhuys6280 Před 2 lety +30

      @@pjavilla Don't really get your comment, if it is a pre-built then the customer is not supposed to install the Cpu cooler themselve. It should pretty much be plug and play on the customers' part.

  • @talkashie
    @talkashie Před 2 lety +409

    The first M.2 SSD I ever installed I ended up installing incorrectly. I didn't know the little standoff was a thing and I had never seen one of these drives installed before. The drive ran for about 3-4 years installed at a ~10 degree angle until it finally died. When I repaired the computer and replaced the drive, I was shocked that I did something so dumb.

    • @benjamin_luscombe
      @benjamin_luscombe Před 2 lety +56

      @♜ Pinned by Gamers Nexus idiots

    • @thealien_ali3382
      @thealien_ali3382 Před 2 lety +70

      @♜ Pinned by Gamers Nexus Ur messing with the wrong guy trust me, Ur not that guy 🤣

    • @TheGuruStud
      @TheGuruStud Před 2 lety +9

      @@TheJukebox92 stand off for the screw. Older ones were elevated kinda like MBs. Now, they're really flush.

    • @sold0ut210
      @sold0ut210 Před 2 lety +14

      @@TheJukebox92 As long as you didn't install your m.2 in a way that bends it or has it under constant pressure, you're fine!

    • @SixDasher
      @SixDasher Před 2 lety +9

      You live and learn. We all made mistakes and broke stuff, even when we knew what we were doing and should have known better :D

  • @ryandodrill6904
    @ryandodrill6904 Před 2 lety +147

    I'm always amazed by these because you can put parts in a case, leave everything at default never touching the bios or any settings and end up with a perfectly workable computer. Sure that's not optimal but it works, yet here we are.

    • @gmualum08
      @gmualum08 Před 2 lety +41

      That's the point I made to my friend when we watched this together. You have to go out of your way to make it this bad

    • @Chrys0lis
      @Chrys0lis Před rokem +2

      The new intel chips sometimes come out of the box needing an undervolt at least for my i7 12700k. Very unstable temps so I undervolted slightly and got better performance with normal temps

    • @headphonesz6527
      @headphonesz6527 Před rokem +5

      Exactly! I used to overclock from like 2006-12, but when I got my 8 core cpu ddr4 ram, pcie4 ssd and GPU in 2019, I saw no reason to overclock

    • @michaelf.2449
      @michaelf.2449 Před rokem +6

      @@headphonesz6527 that's kinda where I'm at currently I'm looking to finally build a new computer, and well don't laugh but my current computer was my first build which wouldn't be an issue except I built it in like 2013 or so...
      2022 still rocking my 4.5ghz i7-2600k, Radeon HD-7950, and 8gb of ddr3 ram.
      It still plays the games I want to play, and like works, but software is becoming an issue now lol windows 11 doesn't like the hardware, and now that the 12600k came out I feel that it's only appropriate to go from a 2600k to a 12600k

  • @Mord_Vi
    @Mord_Vi Před 2 lety +156

    'Unlike Ibuypower they put foam inside'. Having moved at least 20 of these boxes to clients, I never saw a single one that didn't have ample foam protection. The fact they sent YOU guys one without, is stunning to me.

    • @cat-.-
      @cat-.- Před 2 lety +13

      Maybe they stared doing it after being called out in public

    • @Mord_Vi
      @Mord_Vi Před 2 lety +6

      @@cat-.- They've been padding their RDY build and custom builds for years prior to Nexusgamers review. Additionally, I don't doubt they indeed do this - it's not an assumption of them lying, it's just simply so unlike the company standard, and their insurance policy with FedEx.

    • @RazielTheUnborn
      @RazielTheUnborn Před rokem +4

      @@cat-.- I have had my iBuyPower PC for almost a year and it came with foam packing inside but it was something I had to select. You can order the build without foam packing. Likely what happened in this case.

    • @shanez1215
      @shanez1215 Před rokem

      I believe GN purchases these anonymously

    • @animalyze7120
      @animalyze7120 Před rokem

      You seriously give clients these monstrosities? How the Hell are you still business? Most customers will let a boo boo or 2 slip through, not 20 of them.

  • @GenDrag1
    @GenDrag1 Před 2 lety +133

    As an old diehard MSI customer, their quality has dropped tremendously over the last decade. I remember when I had issues with some monitors and 1000 series GPUs and, while they didn't reimburse you for the shipping costs, made up for it by upgrading your current product. I remember having a 60hz 1080p monitor that they replaced with a 90hz 1440p monitor, or a 1070 with no display output that got shipped back as a 1080 ti. It didn't cost the company that much more, as they only lost $100-200 USD when they upgraded you, your defective product can be fixed and sent to another gamer instead of to a landfill, and you felt satisfied with the result as an end user.
    Nowadays, their customer service and product quality is a shell of its former self. You can definitely tell that there are great workers in the company, but the air is just so intoxicated with corporate bs that it undermines what they used to stand for less than ten years ago. Hope they go under new management and go back to doing things because they made sense, not cents.

    • @absoleet
      @absoleet Před 2 lety +35

      Sounds like the situation with many other well known brands, the bean counters have taken over and started squeezing all of the value out in the name of shareholder value.

    • @prla5400
      @prla5400 Před 2 lety +1

      That's really horrible

    • @mjouwbuis
      @mjouwbuis Před 2 lety +3

      If we can't rely on MSI anymore, who do we buy from? I dropped Gigabyte a few years ago since their boards seemed to get less reliable. I dropped Asus 15 years ago for the same reason. I don't think Asus got any better meanwhile.

    • @Omarized160
      @Omarized160 Před 2 lety +1

      Msi God like....it makes dragon sounds 👏👏👐👏👐👏

    • @gypsy6211
      @gypsy6211 Před 2 lety

      Remember when MSI Returns & Warranty dept was 2 old guys in a garage? Seems they got promoted to heads of MSI QC.

  • @jsteezus
    @jsteezus Před 2 lety +112

    Hearing you say its one of the worst computers you have worked on in the first minute of the video.
    Me: wow this must be bad.
    Dell: so we technically win the its better than dell award? 🥇

    • @actualrealbozo
      @actualrealbozo Před 2 lety +1

      @♜ Pinned by Gamers Nexus Hey uh GN can you go run that spam bot filter by ThioJoe again or smth

    • @bengunderson712
      @bengunderson712 Před 2 lety

      Thanks Steeze, back to you

    • @willydilly9020
      @willydilly9020 Před 2 lety

      @time is near weird cult

  • @RP-dy5mu
    @RP-dy5mu Před 2 lety +111

    Woah woah woah buddy, "Boil CPU at 100 degrees"? I don't think that's accurate, because you see, I contacted Alienware about a decade ago about a laptop I had which was going at 105-110 degrees, and they assured me that these processors were made for gaming. According to these specialists, it's totally normal for them to be hotter than the boiling point of water.

    • @tonnentonie2767
      @tonnentonie2767 Před 2 lety +40

      Well it's alien tech, their water boils at higher temps.

    • @paulzaratehuaman6003
      @paulzaratehuaman6003 Před 2 lety

      es normal tener esas temperaturas en una laptop, en un equipo de escritorio no es aceptable debido a que tienes el espacio para poner una refrigeración decente

    • @GholaTleilaxu
      @GholaTleilaxu Před 2 lety +7

      That's the typical marketing bs for noobs. It's like having the car dealer tell you that you can keep your brand-new car's engine revved at 6000 rpm 24/7, no problem whatsoever.

    • @StevenMussels
      @StevenMussels Před rokem +1

      laptops can handle higher temperatures than desktops, they're designed for it

    • @hamm3rextreme546
      @hamm3rextreme546 Před rokem +2

      @@StevenMussels Mostly because they are not upgradeable, so you won't even notice its shorter lifespan compared to a desktop.

  • @802Garage
    @802Garage Před 2 lety +139

    The really sad thing is, by simply using a case with airflow, correctly installing the SSD, and not adding bloatware, this system would actually make some sense.

    • @candorcore3502
      @candorcore3502 Před 2 lety +13

      I thought that might be the case too, but the thermals remained garbage even with the case opened up. While the bloatware would make the CPU run hotter on low loads I don't think it would effect the torture test's (thermal) results much. The problem is the cooler - the V5 is good at what it does, but it's got a TDP of 150w and a 10700 under load will go past 200w.
      I think MSI knew the Vetroo was cheap and had a good public image (again, it's great at what it's designed for), so it was an easy marketing move to install it even though it's asking way too much of the poor thing. If you reset the bios, reinstalled the OS, and changed the case out you'd still need to replace the V5 with something that's rated about 100w higher.

    • @802Garage
      @802Garage Před 2 lety +4

      @@candorcore3502 True. That cooler is being pushed to or past its limits for sure. Def agree with your assessment on why they went with it anyways.

    • @anakinlowground5515
      @anakinlowground5515 Před 2 lety +1

      With a 2060? For $1,750? Why would you use such a low end card in such an expensive system?

    • @802Garage
      @802Garage Před 2 lety +5

      @@anakinlowground5515 Didn't say it would be a good deal. Also GPU prices have only recently gone way down.

    • @anakinlowground5515
      @anakinlowground5515 Před 2 lety +1

      @@802Garage Fair enough.

  • @AWickedOne
    @AWickedOne Před 2 lety +146

    The price just seems insane to me even before they messed up the performance of the components.

    • @brucepreston3927
      @brucepreston3927 Před 2 lety +10

      Yea, you could build this exact computer yourself for way less...

    • @Joze1090
      @Joze1090 Před 2 lety +13

      @@brucepreston3927 if you can get the gpu lol

    • @jakesully2868
      @jakesully2868 Před 2 lety +1

      Agree. I bought a laptop that can crush this machine for less money.

    • @sonicboy678
      @sonicboy678 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jakesully2868 Which brand is it from?

    • @brucepreston3927
      @brucepreston3927 Před 2 lety +6

      @@Joze1090 you could way overpay for one on ebay and still come out ahead...

  • @dashcamandy2242
    @dashcamandy2242 Před 2 lety +118

    Here's a fun idea: take all the internals and throw them in a generic tower case, and see how the thermals stack up in the "basic beige behemoth." It would be interesting to see if some el-cheapo case has better airflow...

    • @prla5400
      @prla5400 Před 2 lety +1

      It does. Many great airflow cases for under 150 dollaz

    • @8lec_R
      @8lec_R Před 2 lety +25

      @@prla5400 I think by el cheapo he means less than 60 bucks

    • @contra1124
      @contra1124 Před 2 lety +28

      @@prla5400 150 dollars doesn't sound cheap lol

    • @tristen9736
      @tristen9736 Před 2 lety +2

      They already did this one with the front panel off. That's pretty close to open air which you're not gonna get much better than

    • @Phyrre56
      @Phyrre56 Před 2 lety +7

      No case is going to have better thermals than taking the front panel off, and that still didn't solve the problem. The case is bad, but the real problem is the bizarre BIOS and power settings that force this CPU to run at full wattage for even simple tasks. Modern CPUs are absolutely not designed to be used that way.

  • @wysockisauce
    @wysockisauce Před 2 lety +15

    Would be cool if you guys did follow up videos for these prebuilts where you fixed all the shortcomings (keeping the original hardware). Then do a comparison to how it shipped from the factory.

  • @docferringer
    @docferringer Před 2 lety +40

    That plastic backplate is good for one thing only: Keeping screws and other metal bits from falling onto the GPU unnoticed and causing a short. Or water from a leaky water block connection.

    • @JessicaFEREM
      @JessicaFEREM Před rokem +3

      that's not a good excuse, they could easily make a metal backplate for not much more money. even cheap metal like magnesium would be better than plastic.

  • @TheGameBench
    @TheGameBench Před 2 lety +73

    This is quite impressive. They seem to have taken your review of the 500X, went back to the drawing board, and decided they had not yet made the worst product on Earth and felt they had more work to do.

    • @Quizack
      @Quizack Před rokem +4

      “What is this!? We can make a MUCH worse product easily! Crank up the boost in that CPU! That SSD, bend it! Kick the S$IT out of it!”

  • @robertedmonson6825
    @robertedmonson6825 Před 2 lety +89

    The more I see you guys review these PC's, the more glad I am I decided to put together my first build in September instead of going with a pre-built! 😆

    • @Plasmic-knight
      @Plasmic-knight Před 2 lety +4

      Haha same, I originally was thinking of getting a pre-built to save me the hassle, then I went and did the prices for what I was paying for and realized I could just build my own and save more. My first build was in April and I was so scared I'd break something. Fast forward now and my pc is serving me very well and I'm so glad I am able to upgrade anytime I want.

    • @PhaythGaming
      @PhaythGaming Před 2 lety +1

      I will say, in the current climate, a prebuilt you do a little maintenance on is probably the most savvy move. Even the used market is worse than that ATM. But I agree that building is an awesome experience, and it's nice to have full control.

  • @bernardoestivalletdivaia4915

    Would be interesting to add a section in the video called "fixing issues" or maybe make a new playlist of videos called "fixing pre-builts" where you guys show simple things that could fix some of the problems. This would be very useful for people that already bought a pre-built and are looking for ways to try to fix them.

    • @cat-.-
      @cat-.- Před 2 lety +1

      I will imagine anyone who is capable of fixing the issues will instead just build the system themselves

  • @twinstars8812
    @twinstars8812 Před 2 lety

    Love this video and your pre-built reviews, any pre-built within the 2.5K to 3K range that you would recommend?

  • @miguelgutierrez2759
    @miguelgutierrez2759 Před 2 lety +77

    The Ultimate Power Plan is usually only available with "Windows Pro for Workstations" which is a sku used for multi-socket cpu monsters with features closer to Windows Server. It's possible to "hack" the power plan into regular Windows Pro. If that was a Not a "Windows Pro for Workstations" OS, they hacked that in. If by chance it came pre-installed with it, then it shows they're incompetent cause a single socket gaming system will never be able to take advantage of it.

    • @MrGetthefuckup
      @MrGetthefuckup Před 2 lety +12

      I am not sure using command promt counts as hacking but I get what you mean
      powercfg -duplicatescheme e9a42b02-d5df-448d-aa00-03f14749eb61

    • @davidr1122
      @davidr1122 Před 2 lety +1

      I have it on my MSI pre-built but and I have Windows 10 Home

    • @miguelgutierrez2759
      @miguelgutierrez2759 Před 2 lety +7

      @@MrGetthefuckup Yep, that's why I put "hack" in quotes.

    • @jeebus6263
      @jeebus6263 Před 2 lety +3

      I'm assuming they're WinReg settings,
      these didn't use to be considered "hacks".

    • @daironhorse
      @daironhorse Před 2 lety

      I can use it on windows 10 and 11 pro from a factory reset

  • @JayStein777
    @JayStein777 Před 2 lety +59

    I love Steve for mercilessly and knowingly teasing my OCD with the plastic on the glass.

    • @gimpinmypants
      @gimpinmypants Před 2 lety +1

      They’re sending the PC back.

    • @obiwankenobi661
      @obiwankenobi661 Před rokem

      @@gimpinmypants no they dont, he literally says at the end "we will give it to someone - in pieces".

  • @ViktardTRTH
    @ViktardTRTH Před rokem +1

    I absolutely love watching these reviews on the Skytech Chronos with a 3900x and 3080 I got as an open box deal for $1799... thank you so much Steve

  • @601Fender
    @601Fender Před rokem

    Just found this channel and this guy, amazing interesting videos!

  • @jean-philipperameau4220
    @jean-philipperameau4220 Před 2 lety +56

    I love the way Steve talks; it's like he has a 1000 things running through his mind when he sees the madness that's set before him.

  • @jamesfleming1861
    @jamesfleming1861 Před 2 lety +86

    MSI’s innovation should be applauded. They have invented the PC/Airfryer.

    • @Gnomleif
      @Gnomleif Před 2 lety +10

      KFC had the patent and prototype. MSI actually got one out on the market.

    • @dharmabummed9923
      @dharmabummed9923 Před 2 lety +1

      Lol. MSI Ageis Airfryer. Eat and game without leaving your chair.

  • @eurodudenj
    @eurodudenj Před rokem

    Great video! Info like this helps us avoid costly mistakes.

  • @toxicteabaging
    @toxicteabaging Před 2 lety

    I love these videos, people looking up these prebuilds must be so thankful to have found this.

  • @voxelfusion9894
    @voxelfusion9894 Před 2 lety +25

    Thermal pate on the pins would top this off perfectly.

    • @mapesdhs597
      @mapesdhs597 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm thinking liver or maybe salmon. ;D

  • @Vok250
    @Vok250 Před 2 lety +66

    Jesus. That CPU GPU combo was a $800 budget build back before Covid.

    • @lexwaldez
      @lexwaldez Před 2 lety +5

      and thank GAWD I built one

    • @LiveType
      @LiveType Před 2 lety +2

      Eh, $800 is pretty much impossible even back then. This is ~$1200. Card alone is ~$425.

    • @igameidoresearchtoo6511
      @igameidoresearchtoo6511 Před 2 lety +1

      @@LiveType He specified pre covid, back then this GPU cost around 250$ MSRP.
      And even pre covid it would have been cheaper, maybe 700$ or 750$ total.

    • @LiveType
      @LiveType Před 2 lety +2

      @@igameidoresearchtoo6511 It did not. It was ~$425. Founders MSRP was $400. I never once saw it below that. Trust me I keep close track of this stuff. Look at the prices of the parts. CPU was ~$280 back then about the same as now. Cheapest GPU in this general performance tier you could possibly get was ~$350 which was a 5700xt. Used stuff in this perf tier wasn't any cheaper. Holy shit we've gone backwards and not just a little. What a crazy time.
      Just CPU and GPU would be ~$680-750. Then you need memory, PSU, case, mobo. I guess $1k is doable so $1200 might have been an overestimate. Regardless, $1750 for this is criminal. That's nearly 100% inflation that I don't see going away any time soon.

    • @hornmonk3zit
      @hornmonk3zit Před 2 lety +1

      It's an almost identical rig to the $700 Walmart laptop LTT reviewed awhile back and that was during Covid, and as the proud owner of one of those I can tell you they can actually move some air at full chooch.

  • @brutusunix
    @brutusunix Před 2 lety

    Wow this is crazy..... great video. Think they want to check the performance of their support team?

  • @orangechicken5479
    @orangechicken5479 Před 2 lety +2

    The plastic removal tease reminded me of why I respect and love Steve so much.

  • @charlesandresen-reed1514
    @charlesandresen-reed1514 Před 2 lety +190

    It's interesting seeing the thermals and settings issues on this one, as I have a computer from this same line. Admittedly a much higher end one as it came with an RTX 3090, but it was the same exact case physically, and I ran it for a year without issues, prior to scavenging it to use the 3090 in a custom build. But I have a suspicion that the only reason it worked well was they used a 240mm liquid cooler exhausting out of the top of the case, and with the rear exhaust and the front fans, and that radiator with its fans, likely had enough pressure to minimize the effect of the shitty case. I'm wondering how much they bothered customizing the BIOS settings for all of the different Aegis PCs- while they use a common case, they include everything from an RTX 2060 to a 3090 OC, and some with pure air setups or some with 120mm or 240mm liquid coolers. If they used just one set of BIOS configurations and flashed them all the same, it might explain some of the garbage settings.

    • @Clumaex
      @Clumaex Před 2 lety +27

      You are right, at 21:30 you see the CPU Cooler Tuning is set to Water Cooler

    • @SlenderSmurf
      @SlenderSmurf Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah I have one with an RTX 3080 and i7 11700kf and it came with a 120mm aio for some reason. After I replaced that with a 240mm one on the top it's been running fantastic. I don't think it came with Norton either but I might have uninstalled it when I got it.

    • @kaelinmarkert5852
      @kaelinmarkert5852 Před 2 lety +4

      Exactly. I have the Gungnir 110R with a setup similar to yours. I have the 360MM AIO in the front and 2 exhaust fans at the top. I have MSI center set to balance so I'm not even throttling the fans and I max out my CPU at 70C when gaming. So it's not the case. Just a shit prebuilt.

    • @samholdsworth420
      @samholdsworth420 Před 2 lety +2

      What kind of person buys a computer and doesn't build it 😂
      n00b...

    • @hondafknciviv3818
      @hondafknciviv3818 Před 2 lety +6

      @@samholdsworth420 i guess the same people that buy phones and don't build them smhsmh

  • @robertfoghis773
    @robertfoghis773 Před 2 lety +39

    Been waiting for another review!
    Here is a thing I feel you guys should do.
    After testing it how it came out of box, you guys should install a fresh windows, set xmp and the way you would have it setup (no bloatware, power management) and run the same tests again. Would LOVE to see how they compare!!
    Thanks again guys great review as always.

    • @SKHYJINX
      @SKHYJINX Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah, that would be an eye opener for many. Out of the box performance vs the do-over.

    • @Cinetyk
      @Cinetyk Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, I agree with this completely. To show just how much performance the manufacturers are leaving on the table.

    • @abysmal5422
      @abysmal5422 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, it seems like the "power virus" behavior all came from the BIOS settings and Windows power plan. Reset the BIOS and enable XMP, clean install Windows, and take off the front panel and it seems like you'd actually have a decent PC, other than the bent-but-for-now-functional SSD.
      This seems like it would be an option in the spirit of this series's conceit of answering the question "what can I recommend to a friend or family member that has an upgrade path and ISN'T me building them a PC and being expected to support it forever."

  • @obsey
    @obsey Před 2 lety +16

    It is a truly sad day when a computer component manufacturer does not know how to properly assemble computers from components it manufacturers itself, a very sad, sad, day.

    • @handlesarefeckinstupid
      @handlesarefeckinstupid Před rokem +1

      It is not MSI that build them, pretty sure it will be a third party, supplied by Msi. It wouldn't be very feasible to ship PC's from Taiwan. It's still the fault of whatever Msi branch that subs out though. QC and training of the 3rd party is dog turd for sure.

  • @TheYear-dm9op
    @TheYear-dm9op Před 2 lety +48

    I remember this series starting out as a genuine attempt to find well built prebuilds that are recommendable and not bashing on brebuilds in general. But oh well, I think it turned out to be a disaster for prebuilds in general, since there are so few acceptable or good ones and so many terrible ones.

    • @DertyMike
      @DertyMike Před 2 lety +3

      My Digital Storm pre-built has been phenomenal. 9600k @5ghz all core and a 2070 super overlooked as well, and I hardly break the 60c mark on either of them when doing anything intensive.

    • @brziperiod
      @brziperiod Před 2 lety +2

      Exactly. Used to be finding the good. Now it's finding the bad, so the good stands out. Same goal different approach.

  • @idontneedthis66
    @idontneedthis66 Před 2 lety +38

    @Steve, you should do a follow-up video titled "MSI Pre-Built Redemption Story!" where you take all the components, throw them into a GOOD case of comparable pricing, with a non-bloated OS install and then do comparison metrics to show how good the parts could have been had MSI not chosen a junk case and bungled Windows so badly. A bit of a "here's how bad MSI self-owned themselves" for fun.
    I'd love to see those comparative metrics.

    • @JinghisKhan
      @JinghisKhan Před 2 lety +1

      THIS. All the parts including the PSU are non proprietary. You could even choose to do it in another MSI case with actual airflow like the MAG Forge 100R or the MPG Velox 100P to show that this could have been done SO MUCH better just from a hardware perspective.

    • @Ravenousjoe
      @Ravenousjoe Před 2 lety +1

      That seems like a waste of time. Those are regular components, just look up literally any review of them individually, and there is your answer. Not trying to be a dick, but GN wasting time on such a video would just be answered with "yeah, no shit steve, components work when they aren't overheating"

  • @ipotato95
    @ipotato95 Před 2 lety +19

    Expecting a statement from the MSI within 48 hours given how much traction GN has gained with his reviews

  • @-DeScruff
    @-DeScruff Před 2 lety +1

    About that SSD: Ive noticed sometimes with M.2 SSDs that are bent there is a chance for random blue screens.
    Of course it will vary model to model, and where the bend is that will affect things. But it ain't a good look if from the factory a PC has potential for such issues.

  • @darkhunterkiller4602
    @darkhunterkiller4602 Před 2 lety +1

    I love watching these. Steve being calmly irritated as he's describing how bad something is, cracks me up every time! 🤣

  • @kahootrocks5131
    @kahootrocks5131 Před 2 lety +10

    Damn just seeing a new video of a prebuilt review always makes me get a bag of popcorn I love your content!

  • @toshikikarukawa8148
    @toshikikarukawa8148 Před 2 lety +55

    MSI usually screws up with power managing. I have a MSI Laptop and it was like having a piece of the sun in your hands until you adjust the power limits. Just by reducing 5% the maximum power amount of the CPU reduced the temps of the CPU from 90+C to 60-70C, with minimal performance loss. I don't know who makes the power profiles for MSI, but it's a catastrophe...

    • @xeridea
      @xeridea Před 2 lety +10

      This is a laptop issue in general. They tend to push the limits of the power envelope for the cooling. I generally do this on laptops, to save battery, and even if plugged in, to reduce fan noise. It doesn't end up being 5%, and will go to one dynamic power step lower on the CPU, whatever that may be, probably 15-20%, but it has a huge savings. CPU power consumption is roughly a function of frequency times voltage squared, so reducing frequency 15%, which drops voltage... squared, you get a massive power reduction. If you don't require max performance, it's a no brainer to lower the limit.

    • @sage4670
      @sage4670 Před rokem

      I'm pretty sure what you did was disable turbo boost. You may wanna check that you're actually boosting past the cpu's base speeds. Though to be fair, turbo boost on laptops is almost a gimmick

  • @bettycrock9362
    @bettycrock9362 Před 2 lety

    Keep it up I bought pre builds only for a template and I always wonder how I can’t get a job in computers when I buy a pre build fixing all the mistakes they do. So sad

  • @efftee
    @efftee Před 2 lety +6

    Gotta love how MSI's CHEAPER case (the V100R) actually has decent airflow by not completely choking the fans and instead opting for a mostly mesh front panel. It would have benefitted this prebuilt so much.

  • @rdiznfriends
    @rdiznfriends Před 2 lety +3

    these will never get old lol. its amazing the corners that get cut with these prebuilts and the general incompetence of the configurations they are selling to unwitting customers. great work as always guys!

  • @defender714
    @defender714 Před 2 lety

    I am so glad for your reports, Nexus. You do the community a great service. Can you comment on gaming laptops?

  • @Cat_Stevens
    @Cat_Stevens Před 2 lety

    This video inspired me to loosen the screws on my M.2 heatsink, because I realised it was bending in the same way due to the thermal pad, and I figured I should make it "tight-ish" on installation.
    The build is like 3 days old but I really wish the SSD had a full screw hole to minimise this instead of the half screw holes we get now.

  • @LFPGaming
    @LFPGaming Před 2 lety +257

    hot damn, this Aegis is one to avoid for sure

    • @tylertuthill5121
      @tylertuthill5121 Před 2 lety +22

      just built one... it's fun, easy, and you learn something

    • @ffwast
      @ffwast Před 2 lety +39

      Well it's off-the-shelf parts, so you just have to rip the front panel off, remount the cpu cooler, remount the ssd, format the drive and install a clean copy of an operating system, tweak the cpu power settings in the bios, change the ram speeds in the bios, and rip off the plastic backplate and it should be... functional.

    • @contra1124
      @contra1124 Před 2 lety +21

      @@ffwast and at that point you have almost built it yourself lol

    • @QuantumConundrum
      @QuantumConundrum Před 2 lety +40

      I keep seeing "just build it" but most of the time pcpartpicker shows a price higher than prebuilds... just a reminder that we're not exactly in normal markets. Double check everything.

    • @ttvv90
      @ttvv90 Před 2 lety +6

      @@QuantumConundrum Just budget in the best parts you can get. Yes you can sometimes get a slightly higher skew of GPU in a pre-built, but it's not going to perform to it's maximum capabilities as most of these pre-builts have flaws that are detrimental to performance. Mostly because SI's are trying to save money in other ways. So if you pick some parts that make sense together and put them in a decent case, it's going to outperform a similarly priced pre-built 99% of the time.

  • @flying-cacti
    @flying-cacti Před 2 lety +18

    I feel like MSI has become the evil dragon in the PC space over the past few years.

    • @jsteezus
      @jsteezus Před 2 lety +1

      Or the hardware they make that is actually good is completely over priced. They were one of the first companies to raise gpu msrps before it became the norm for every AIB to raise msrp. But like they make good gpu’s that are over priced, they make good gen 4 ssd’s that are over priced, they make cases that honestly if they just took the front panel and swapped it with mesh it would be fine but still over priced. Only real parts that you can get from msi at a good price without feeling like you got the bottom of the barrel is motherboards. But if you want their “budget” gpu you get a plastic backplate and a plastic shroud on a 3080. Like if I want a gpu with an extremely marked up over reference msrp I might as well get a strix.

    • @jintsuubest9331
      @jintsuubest9331 Před 2 lety +3

      Always has been.

    • @flying-cacti
      @flying-cacti Před 2 lety

      @@jsteezus I've noticed that the Nvidia GPU binning seems to be bad on MSI GPU's from my experience as-well. Some other brands tend to get better binned chips also such as EVGA. I agree thermals are not the best especially in their gpu design which may be why they loose performance to thermals depending...

  • @Rewiree
    @Rewiree Před 2 lety

    Steve, can you look into MSI Vampiric R100 as well? It only has 1 front fan and 1 backfan, and it was heating SO much that I had to buy a kit of 4 fans and install them myself! Even with them installed I could only get down to 70c, and CPU would still spike to 104-127c in 3DMark benchmarks.

  • @azraelzx5269
    @azraelzx5269 Před 2 lety

    Strange that a newer pre-built above mine has these issues, I have the aegis se series pre-built & it is fully built now, new case, new cpu, liquid cooled, & new psu but when I first got it temperature's were really good & none of the part's were damaged & really the only issue was wire management but besides that it has served me well & still is to this day with most of the same part's! Just surprised to see the newer model's having issue's

  • @Lewbowski_Kewlski
    @Lewbowski_Kewlski Před 2 lety +59

    I almost got this PC as my own, there were newer models of the cases that had the half front mesh. I just ended up getting Ibuypower prebuilt which was a better choice in pricing and thermals for me.

    • @iClapBooty
      @iClapBooty Před 2 lety +20

      hate to break it to you but IBP doesn't have a great track record either

    • @jfkesq
      @jfkesq Před 2 lety +1

      learn to roll your own

    • @Underskore
      @Underskore Před 2 lety +3

      @@iClapBooty seemingly better than this mess though.

    • @iClapBooty
      @iClapBooty Před 2 lety +1

      @@Underskore can't disagree with that lol

    • @willydilly9020
      @willydilly9020 Před 2 lety +1

      @time is near cult

  • @SuperNorstShow
    @SuperNorstShow Před 2 lety +28

    I still like this build more than most that I have seen on this playlist. Someone who is halfway competent could fix half of these issues just by wiping the drive and reinstalling windows. The BIOS settings are worrying, but again very fixable if you know what your doing. Atleast with this one, your not getting a motherboard with a ripped out PCI slot, a weak as hell cooler, and a shit GPU. MSI does need to lower their price, use the airflow version of the case, and QC check their builds more. Hopefully they actually listen to you this time, which is disappointing as I generally like their products.

    • @michaelscott-joynt3215
      @michaelscott-joynt3215 Před 2 lety

      It's one thing if you're fine with it. Most people aren't competent at all. Secondly, you're messing around with a retail product, where you need to consider warranty issues. Generally, that's not a place where you want to meddle, as you could void that warranty. This is sort of why a warranty exists, so a customer has a path to redress problems with a delivered product. It's not supposed to fall on the customer. Imagine if Teslas came from the factory with several issues, and DIY handy people said it really wasn't that big of a deal, with just a few hours of work. You can like a product and demand an acceptable level of quality and service.

    • @LegitosaurusRex
      @LegitosaurusRex Před 2 lety

      Cept for the other guy in the comments who was competent and found that the 750W PSU was not enough for the 3090 it came with, causing it to crash, the waterblock had plastic on it still that said "please remove before install", temps stayed high unless the front panel was removed, and then the water cooler stopped pushing water. So he had to buy his own 1200W PSU and a new front panel to fix the problems, not to mention all his time spent troubleshooting all these issues including the BIOS issue.

  • @chielmeiberg
    @chielmeiberg Před 2 lety

    Hi there staff from GamersNexus, I'm wondering if you can review Medion prebuilts, as their i5 11400+RTX 3070 for 1399 euro doesn't look bad at all, but was wondering on how it would fare in your through testing. Thanks! Love the series!

  • @TheK9music
    @TheK9music Před rokem

    I want to see drake do more industrial just because I think it's interesting to see different manufacturers approach to the same problem, like how will an Argo salvage differ etc

  • @gmualum08
    @gmualum08 Před 2 lety +24

    I'm still trying to wrap my head around how this thing thermal throttled WITH THE FRONT PANEL OFF. Obviously I know it has to do with the weird power limits they manually set which far exceeded what the air cooler was rated for. But damn you have to go out of your way to make a prebuilt this impressively bad

    • @xeridea
      @xeridea Před 2 lety +4

      Possibly some to do with imperfect cooler mounting, but it wasn't horrible, and should have been adequate. Probably the power settings. Even high end tower coolers will struggle with 255W.

    • @sulkyvirus8676
      @sulkyvirus8676 Před 2 lety +1

      Yea he knocks the front panel but it actually lets plenty of air in. Mine has zero issues with a 3070ti and the front panel off bare impacts temps at all.

  • @jaksparts
    @jaksparts Před 2 lety +17

    Would love to see your perfect pc. Built from scratch, with your prefer case, motherboard, CPU etc etc. Let us see the parts you would use.

  • @douglasv4266
    @douglasv4266 Před 2 lety +1

    Does it come with one of those fire alarm hammers for breaking the glasses in the event of emergency?
    As I am sure using it on the glass front panel would be a good way to prevent future dust built up actually caching fire ;-)

  • @ArtGarcia1880
    @ArtGarcia1880 Před 2 lety +11

    I have this case and the airflow isn't bad. I also did some tests with front cover on/off and found like a 1 degree difference under load. Your test results also showed a bit more than that but still within a reasonable temperature range. The issues with heat seem to be software settings and cpu cooler.

    • @trevorallen8514
      @trevorallen8514 Před rokem

      What CPU GPU are you using ?

    • @fabsenbmx
      @fabsenbmx Před 8 měsíci

      same here. 5700x 6800 xt. its a few degrees difference for me

  • @p.d.k.
    @p.d.k. Před 2 lety +3

    MSI’s Z690I Unify does the exact same thing to m.2 drives. The small rubber pad for bracing the underside of the m.2 is designed for a double sided SSD. No extra pad is included to increase the height for single sided SSDs. I had to leave the heatsink off the m.2 to prevent bending the SSD.

    • @mcstark2700
      @mcstark2700 Před 2 lety

      their h510i is similar, but there's also this sorta thick metal trough around it on the board. presumably meant to cool the back, but there's no thermal pad so all it does is block airflow.

  • @andrewgaeraths1737
    @andrewgaeraths1737 Před 2 lety +16

    MSI used to be my "go to" motherboard and GPU company. That was until I started researching and buying components for my newest build in 5 years. Then reviewers were telling us that the VRM's had thermal issues in the MoBo's I was considering so I decided to try another manufacturer that had better reviews. Now after this and other reviews I wonder if I can trust MSI for anything?! I work too hard for my money to throw it away on shoddy components let alone a prebuilt. Thank you MSI for encouraging me to try other manufacturers which have not failed to impress me.

    • @Ravenousjoe
      @Ravenousjoe Před 2 lety +7

      ALL manufacturers have "subpar" VRMs on some of their motherboards, ALL have cheap components, but looking strictly at their low tier components for "research" is just confirmation bias. MSI, Gigabyte, and Asus all have motherboards with similar quality around the same price, and looking up proper reviews of VRM quality is much more valid than looking at random reviews of people running a 5950x on a $120 board and saying MSI bad. MSI had the crown for numerous generations of AM4 motherboards because they had GOOD VRMs on more budget friendly boards. This is coming from someone that has owned motherboards from all manufacturers, and has bought what meets my needs, and isn't pushing the budget too high. This time around, it was a Gigabyte board, last time it was MSI, and it was Asus back in Haswell.

    • @akaraven66
      @akaraven66 Před 2 lety +1

      ASUS is still a pretty decent hardware company, but just don't ever install their garbage tier software, they have a less than zero chance of getting it right. Even my new ASUS board from like a month ago being a Z690 is a great board, but after hours of installing and re-installing their crap I just removed it and went with something else for my CPU, GPU and ARGB.

    • @hellequinm
      @hellequinm Před 2 lety +4

      All companies have good and bag products, we should evaluate by model we want. Everyone talks good about ASUS, went for that and less than 6 months 3 motherboards to RMA. Asus never again, even if the reviewers says it's good. Bought an MSI ITX for my SFF build, amazing board. The downside to that is to have to spend hours researching for every single piece of hardware, nowadays I don't have the same energy to do that.

    • @pokemoncrusher1246
      @pokemoncrusher1246 Před 2 lety

      Msi is shit, they took 9 months to release a bios for zen 2

    • @1011wrestlemania
      @1011wrestlemania Před 2 lety

      Asus strix boards seem to be the best ones

  • @Decimator16
    @Decimator16 Před rokem +3

    I actually purchased an MSI Aegis a while ago during the graphics card shortage of the 30-series, and was overall quite pleased with it. Mine came with the top of the line 3070 that MSI makes the SUPRIM X version. I added a second 1TB SSD from my old system, replaced the 16GB of RAM is came with with 32GB of Corsair Vengeance, and have really only had three complaints, MSI's mystic light software for RGB control should be better, the 240R MSI liquid cooler it came with died after about 2 years due to a recall issue, I simply replaced it with an NH-D15S, and it came with a 2TB hard drive that I didn't really want or need. otherwise all components were actually of quite good quality and well installed, and of all the research I did on the market I think it was the best bang for your buck out of what was available at the time.

  • @ajax4165
    @ajax4165 Před 2 lety

    The CPU in my MSI rtx 2070 laptop thermal throttles within 1 minute of gaming. Undervolting with ThrottleStop is a CPU life-saver. First thing I had to do. It's a decent laptop when it isn't overheating.
    Crazy they can't even get their desktop below 95c.
    Thanks for the great videos GN team.

  • @ota7548
    @ota7548 Před 2 lety +17

    Duet Display is actually a useful app when you need it, as it allows you to use a tablet(s) [Android, iOS] as an external display via cable or LAN. It is trialware, and it being preinstalled however I'd consider it bloatware.
    Good Alternatives™ if you don't want trialware would be scrcpy (FOSS, Android only) or spacedesk (soon-to-be Freemium, LAN only) if you've got a tablet laying around and would like to use it as an extra monitor.
    I have spacedesk setup on 2 older nexus tablets and a Pixel C over wifi and connected to the W10 wifi direct hotspot, but also have a Duet license when I may need it. I will probably end up getting a spacdesk pro license once they allow purchasing.

    • @richardcrossley5581
      @richardcrossley5581 Před 2 lety +2

      Agree, I have Duet Display on my 2015 Macbook Air and use it with an old iPad 2. Saves the iPad from e-waste and gives me a second screen when I need it.
      Installed here, it's bloatware, pure and simple.

    • @ota7548
      @ota7548 Před 2 lety +1

      @@richardcrossley5581 Yes, anything that keeps otherwise good working devices out of the dumpster.
      And because the Nexus' are IPS displays I can have mostly static windows open in them or videos/podcast apps without worrying about burn-in; or move chats to them when I need to, as latency is not as critical for me when I have those there.
      The battery endurance on them is still great (80-90%) since I've been keeping the charges at or below 70%.
      Sidenote: I also have a Nexus 5X setup as a streamdeck/macro pad through Touch Portal constantly plugged in with a charge limit set to 70% 👌

    • @ota7548
      @ota7548 Před 2 lety

      ​@I'm A Spam Account iirc there have been ways to setup a faux external display with scrcpy but it's buried somewhere in the github issue's thread.
      Superdisplay is very responsive but is only limited to one concurrent device, and yeah spacedesk can get pretty choppy which is why I have not latency dependent windows there.

  • @unitedfools3493
    @unitedfools3493 Před 2 lety +23

    Gamers Nexus is one of the most credible outlets in IT. Thank you!

    • @MARTINRIGGSS
      @MARTINRIGGSS Před 2 lety

      @♜ Pinned by Gamers Nexus
      This is a scam account. Just a heads up.

  • @williamdavis9562
    @williamdavis9562 Před 6 měsíci

    Good thing I found this video, I was getting ready to order an MSI aegis.
    I am wondering though if they've fixed some of these problems.

  • @notaninquisitor7274
    @notaninquisitor7274 Před 2 lety

    seeing pre-builts like this make me glad that my custom build from ibuypower did not have any of these issues. Most surprisingly, no bloatware or ads at all.

  • @luqdude
    @luqdude Před 2 lety +13

    Reminds me of how I ordered a MSI laptop, and the SSD wasn't even plugged in (it looked kinda like whoever was installing the SSD missed, and instead the end of the ssd where it connects was ON TOP of the port). To be fair it was open box but still. Pretty sure I got a picture of it somewhere

    • @killertruth186
      @killertruth186 Před 2 lety

      For my MSI gaming laptop, only the CPU didn't have the proper thermal paste application. I had accidentally caused a short on the motherboard.

    • @flaccidpringle
      @flaccidpringle Před 2 lety +1

      my sister had one where the battery, after just a few years, managed to bloat to epic proportions and crack the case
      i saved the components by ripping out the battery (affixed professionally to the system with electrical tape and hot glue) and running it off the mains as a gaming-capable set-top box

    • @killertruth186
      @killertruth186 Před 2 lety

      @@flaccidpringle My mother's old laptop had a dead battery, then replaced it with a new battery part (it puffed up into a pillow and finally gotten a "genuine" battery for it. Then later did the same thing. I had a feeling that Sony had SERIALIZED every laptop batteries!

    • @luqdude
      @luqdude Před 2 lety

      @@flaccidpringle If it was that big then holy shit thats scary. That's not a battery, that's a bomb waiting to explode

    • @flaccidpringle
      @flaccidpringle Před 2 lety

      @@luqdude yeah, generally i advise against getting gaming laptops for anything but the form factor; those batteries become fire hazards after two years at most

  • @TekniQx
    @TekniQx Před 2 lety +13

    I've had plenty of ASUS and Gigabyte motherboards that almost always bend my m.2 SSD at least slightly (maybe not as bad, but still). So that part wasn't really surprising to me.

    • @3g2i63
      @3g2i63 Před 2 lety

      Some motherboards have 2 (thermal or just pressure) pads stacked on each other between like the m.2 60 and m.2 80 length. Depending if your SSD is one or double-side you have to peel one pad off. I wondered if it was the problem here.

  • @jake-the-neko5531
    @jake-the-neko5531 Před rokem

    i was actually looking at getting this case to update the look of my pc, glad i went for something that doesn't have temperature issues

  • @shanelady1049
    @shanelady1049 Před 2 lety +1

    I realy hope they do CLX Computers at some point, I'm like mine quite a lot and would like to see what others think.

  • @Ruckus907
    @Ruckus907 Před 2 lety +5

    I'm always glad to see other people having problems with MSI and not just me. I had a laptop and a desktop, both had problems non-stop. Built my own desktop in November and made sure not to buy anything MSI.

  • @mariastevens6406
    @mariastevens6406 Před 2 lety +24

    Walmart: "You knew our quality is bottom of the barrel."
    Steve: "Really? It can't be worse than this."
    Dell: "Hold my beer."
    MSI: "Forget Dell, wait 'til you see this one."
    Thanks, Steve.

    • @chemislife
      @chemislife Před 2 lety

      You just know dell is not going to take this lose laying down. They will have an answer in the coming months.

    • @mariastevens6406
      @mariastevens6406 Před 2 lety

      @@chemislife oi, no wonder we have global warming

    • @chemislife
      @chemislife Před 2 lety

      @@mariastevens6406 obviously you have to create the problem in order for you to come up with the solution right?

    • @igameidoresearchtoo6511
      @igameidoresearchtoo6511 Před 2 lety +2

      Back to you, Steve!

    • @mariastevens6406
      @mariastevens6406 Před 2 lety

      @@igameidoresearchtoo6511 ya Ikr lol

  • @weeblbob233
    @weeblbob233 Před 2 lety

    Wait. Do you test prebuilts or was this a random youtube algorithm? I love this.

  • @vedantagrawal9530
    @vedantagrawal9530 Před 2 lety +1

    The peel tease was so Steve.
    It had me laughing.

  • @richknudsen5781
    @richknudsen5781 Před 2 lety +5

    Kudos to GN here.
    Two years ago I bought a system from Cyberpower and never checked power settings.
    It was set, just like Steve said, at "savings mode".
    Changed it to performance mode and Damn, that's the shit right there.
    Thanks for the education brother, you rock.

  • @gamepotato
    @gamepotato Před 2 lety +10

    So, there are now 5 benders: Firebenders, Waterbenders, Earthbenders, Airbenders, and SSDbenders.

  • @stormwager9340
    @stormwager9340 Před 2 lety +2

    It’s a shame with the temps and quality control, my first modern prebuilt was an MSI CODEX R 10SC-006US pc and it runs cool ( 25-30C idle) and everything worked (had to change ram speed manually tho) and very solid. i7 10100F , 16gb RAM (XPG D10) and rtx 2060 Ventus XS OC for under $900 right before pandemic, unbeatable deal. Even came with a 500gb ssd and a 1 TB hard drive. Sad a lot of prebuilts theses days are not built to standard.

  • @arthurclayton8206
    @arthurclayton8206 Před 2 lety

    @gamers nexus I would love to see a test on the plastic v1 tech backplates, and see if there are any performance issues.
    1) On top of a card with a factory metal backplate
    2 )On top of a card without any backplate.
    They state it does not cause any thermal issues. I'm curious because I have one on top of an RTX 3090. This would be awesome to know.

  • @xhacker
    @xhacker Před 2 lety +4

    As someone whose been using a HAF 912 for the last decade, it stuns me how so many manufacturers choose to cover half of the entire case in glass with little to no intakes.

    • @Zipppyart
      @Zipppyart Před 2 lety

      Still rocking my OG Phantom. Even with just the CPU fan going it runs loads cooler than this monstrosity, and I originally had an FX8350!

    • @rogehmarbi
      @rogehmarbi Před 2 lety

      Meanwhile, an abkoncore case I used to have :
      Install 3 fans at the front side but cover the entire front half of the case.
      The only holes in that case was the exhaust at the back and a decorative hole at the top, which was so tiny and you couldnt install any fan there anyway

    • @FooPanda
      @FooPanda Před 2 lety +1

      Glass is neat, but give me a solid black box with some grate vents any day!

  • @Sc0ttPrian
    @Sc0ttPrian Před 2 lety +40

    Everyone knows, if you want to make a computer nice and quite, you just have to seal off all the places where air could flow, because that's where sound escapes. lol

  • @vastravax7670
    @vastravax7670 Před 2 lety

    Certainly some issues here but the cae is fine. I ran hot hardware and got great temps. The dust filters were also necessary and very useful for me.

  • @kotharwakhasis
    @kotharwakhasis Před 2 lety +1

    I bought an MSI prebuilt last summer (need to upgrade the whole system + GPU shortage)
    The GPU was throtteling last summer on 4K gaming (thanks to the heatbox case)
    The CPU started throtteling this winter on Cyberpunk (120mm AIO with the infamous design pump-on-the-rad ...)
    The M2gen4 ssd was an OEM one, with an obscure firmware (3k read speeed). Fortunately I managed to upgrade it for the 7k read speeds.
    The 2 ram sticks were laptop ones, with the JEDEC-3200 horrible timings (no XMP of course)
    The cable management was a joke. Non modular PSU.
    And the fans were going 100% (thanks MSI, I got a private jet simulator for free !)
    I've never built a pc before, but I managed to move all the parts to a lian-li o11 dynamic + 6 lian-li daisy chained fans + kraken x73 (9 fans in total)
    Finally, I cannot hear it and thermals are excellent.
    The main difficulty was the MSI motherboard (héhé boy ...) Many headers (RGB ones and USB 2) were missing. The manual of this motherboard model was referencing them though. Guess they use some "mutant" motherboard for the prebuilts too...
    Long story short :
    - be warry of MSI prebuilts
    - thanks for all your testing videos : if only I watched your channel before buying

  • @junjiexie
    @junjiexie Před 2 lety +12

    Does the problem go away with a full OS purge/reinstall? Or is it a problem with the case/cooler/mounting.
    Just curious

    • @NightKev
      @NightKev Před 2 lety

      "The" problem is the entire prebuilt, so unless you also purge all the hardware from existence then no, "the problem" will not go away.

    • @julian.morgan
      @julian.morgan Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah I was a bit surprised GN didn't configure things how they SHOULD be - a bit like taking the front cover off the case for thermal comparison - such as resetting the BIOS or putting sane settings in ( I'm curious as to what would happen with "load optimised defaults"?) and setting up Windows optimally. Then you'd have a "this is what these parts CAN do when not put together by idiots" set of numbers.

    • @jfkesq
      @jfkesq Před 2 lety +1

      @@julian.morgan next video?

    • @FluffyTheGryphon
      @FluffyTheGryphon Před 2 lety

      Case is bad and the cooler isn't enough for that workload.

    • @nicholasgraves3149
      @nicholasgraves3149 Před 2 lety +3

      @@julian.morgan They've already done this. We know the empirical performance of this CPU and this GPU in a vacuum. The entire point of this series is that the person who would buy this sort of system has little to no knowledge of systems, or has little to no motivation to fix somebody else's incompetence. They want to buy a box, plug it in, and have it work. I'm not going to go buy some garbage car because a carTuber showed me how garbage it was, but that I can invest my time and money in making it workable. I'm just going to go buy something else.

  • @Echristoffe
    @Echristoffe Před 2 lety +3

    Could have been a good one if they choose a normal case (not a stupid “gaming” one) and a clean windows …
    Those prebuilt need a clear cmos + enable xmp + clean windows install.
    Then they can be usable.

  • @Phynellius
    @Phynellius Před 2 lety +1

    I've had a similar SSD issue with the NVME riser on the Crosshair VIII Impact board. No damage so far, I guess maybe the thermal pad is too thick or something to that effect

  • @dogsarebest7107
    @dogsarebest7107 Před rokem

    I have the newer version of this one. The only problem it had was that the motherboard bios was set to 60w TDP! Set that to the proper tdp, and it's been great. Also has a rtx3060ti, got it when no gpus had been around. I added a noctua second fan kit to that V cooler in push/pull, with the noctua being the pusher and oem being the puller, and it won't break 65C no matter what I do. One thing I'm not sure about is the GPU wouldn't spin up it's fans until it was already 60C.. used MSI afterburner to set the base fan % to 30% and my computer stays under 110F for most things not graphics related. It will go up and hit 65c on rendering or gaming, which it will slowly climb up with the gpu at 100% but haven't done any 4+ hours gaming to see how high it will go. It's fairly nice.
    Also I don't know if they listened to you, or they knew about the m2 bending? My computer's M2 cooler was in a ziplock bag.. for me to install on my own. I thought that strange

  • @jordan-mn6yy
    @jordan-mn6yy Před 2 lety +7

    having the intake be so limited may actually induce stress on the fans of the whole system once they kick up and not have enough airflow. I think the best case scenario would be a case with many holes so stuff can breathe easily, and fans never get stressed trying to push air that isnt there, ie negative pressure

    • @kevinwells9751
      @kevinwells9751 Před rokem

      Yep, things are quieter and more stable if they can just get the air they need

  • @xSilentPandorum
    @xSilentPandorum Před 2 lety +3

    I'm confused. Why were CPU temps so bad even after removing the front panel and maxing fans?

    • @futuza
      @futuza Před rokem

      The horrible power management settings on the motherboard and Windows power configuration combined with a cooler that isn't powerful enough for the cpu it was paired with mainly.

  • @ODog2323
    @ODog2323 Před 2 lety

    Can you make a follow up video demonstrating fixes for some of those issues in case someone bought a similar system from MSI last year? Asking for a friend... :-/

  • @Syphiinx
    @Syphiinx Před rokem

    I’ve honestly got this pc over a year ago and I didn’t have many issues with mine at all the only time it got really hot pretty hot was due to the fact I was hot boxing it in a corner of my desk/room once I moved it up on my desk and added my ac in (due to it being summer and it gets very hot and humid in my room) my pc has been running cold and very well without issue

  • @Hackerman-bd9hq
    @Hackerman-bd9hq Před 2 lety +3

    When it comes to cooling I find that I can't judge a case so easily until it's built and tested. The Ibuypower PC I have had little to no intake space, I thought temps would surely get into the 80s, it never goes above the mid 70s under high load.

    • @anotheridiotwind1201
      @anotheridiotwind1201 Před 2 lety +1

      Have you tried stress testing and benchmarks or is that 70 just light gaming with a GPU bottleneck?

    • @halometroid
      @halometroid Před 2 lety

      See, its not about the case, its about fan intake vs outake (positive, neutral or negative pressure).

  • @universalsinewave7559
    @universalsinewave7559 Před 2 lety +3

    I literally just said last year that MSI needs to make proper airflow cases because of this issue.

  • @shraken_of_darktide9066
    @shraken_of_darktide9066 Před 2 lety +6

    All I can say is this to everyone at Gamers Nexus thank you so much for putting the time and effort and Research into these videos to show how power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely the last pre-built PC I bought was in 2013 and that lasted me up until roughly 2017 but luckily I was able to swap out the hard drive and a couple of other things to keep it running and it finally died permanently and 2019 but by then I had already been doing research on building my own computer if it wasn't for specifically Gamers Nexus and jayz2cents I probably would have bought another pre-built computer but because I wanted to do it myself I took my time I learned how to do it I learned all of the technical aspects of building a computer and pairing certain parts with other parts to make sure that I was getting the best price-to-performance and I wasn't creating bottlenecks and because of J I actually built my first computer with a full custom water-cooled Loop I've done the best I can by showing my appreciation by buying your mouse pads the ones that you had signed with a gentleman that you did a live stream with I can't remember his name right now off the top of my head and I also bought your one millions of t-shirt I want to get my hands on your modmat and toolkit but they're always but they're always out of stock dammit okay this, it's been long enough but I just wanted to put my appreciation out there for everything that you guys do thank you so much.

  • @andrewdeck7945
    @andrewdeck7945 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for sharing this video. I am getting close to doing a big computer update. I was before watching this, planning on using MSI gpu and mobo. However, now I am concerned about my ability to trust the company. Do you guys have any recommendations for alternative companies I can trust? Thanks!