$8000 Disaster Prebuilt PC - Corsair & Origin Fail Again

The video harshly criticizes an $8,000 prebuilt gaming PC from Origin, highlighting its poor cooling, high thermal temperatures, and questionable build quality despite its exorbitant price. The reviewer concludes that the system offers poor value, with significant thermal and performance issues, and recommends DIY builds or better-priced alternatives instead.

The video critically reviews an $8,000 prebuilt gaming PC from Origin, highlighting its exorbitant price compared to DIY parts. Originally costing around $6,500, the system’s price has now increased to over $8,300, with a markup of $1,700 to $2,500 over the cost of assembling similar parts oneself. The reviewer emphasizes that despite the high cost, the build quality and components are disappointing, with issues like poor water cooling, discolored tubing, and inadequate cooling for the GPU’s VRAM, which reaches unsafe temperatures of 100°C. The system’s price is compared to expensive items like professional GPUs or used cars, underscoring its poor value proposition.

The review details the system’s internal hardware, including a water-cooled CPU and a high-end RTX 5090 GPU, which is the main reason to consider the build. However, the cooling setup is flawed, with the GPU’s memory overheating due to inadequate cooling and fans that do not activate until well after the GPU reaches dangerous temperatures. The tubing and water cooling components are poorly maintained and look aged, with discolored and degraded tubing, despite Corsair claiming the tubing is UV resistant. The reviewer criticizes the water cooling loop for being amateurish and insufficient, especially since it only cools the CPU and not the GPU, leaving the latter to run dangerously hot.

Performance testing reveals thermal and power issues, with the GPU reaching 83-90°C under load, causing clock throttling and reduced performance. The memory’s temperature spikes to 100°C, well beyond safe limits, and the system’s fans remain mostly off during load, only activating after the GPU overheats. System power consumption is high at nearly 900W under full load, and noise levels are relatively low due to the fans’ slow speeds, which is a mixed blessing since better cooling would improve performance and thermals. The review also notes that the BIOS and software setup are mostly standard, with no major issues, but the overall build quality and cooling strategy are inadequate for such an expensive system.

The reviewer conducts a detailed teardown, finding that cable management and assembly are generally well-executed, but the water cooling loop is poorly maintained and looks unprofessional. The internal components, including the motherboard, RAM, and power supply, are standard and functional, but the water cooling’s poor condition and discolored tubing diminish the build’s quality. They highlight that the system’s flaws, combined with its high price, make it a poor investment, especially since comparable or better performance can be achieved with DIY parts at a fraction of the cost. The review concludes that the system is not worth the money, especially given the thermal and cooling issues, and strongly advises viewers to consider alternative options.

In summary, the video condemns the Origin prebuilt for its inflated cost, poor cooling, and subpar component choices, despite its high price tag. The reviewer emphasizes that the system fails to deliver value, with thermal issues, inadequate GPU cooling, and questionable build quality overshadowing its premium components. They point out that even if one ignores the price, the system’s cooling and thermal management are fundamentally flawed, leading to potential hardware failures. Ultimately, the review advocates for DIY solutions or more reliable, better-priced prebuilt options, warning viewers against spending such a large sum on a system that underperforms and shows signs of poor craftsmanship.