HP’s new Envy Phoenix desktops are ready to take on virtual reality
HP has launched two new Envy Phoenix 860 desktops in partnership with HTC that have been 'Virtual Reality Certified'. These are guaranteed to provide an optimal experience for the HTC Vive when it releases later this year, although they will likely work with the Oculus Rift as well.
The new HP Envy Phoenix 860 desktops are quite pretty to look at. (Image Source: HP)
HP is releasing two new Envy Phoenix 860 desktops that have been ‘Virtual Reality Certified’ in order to cater to consumers in the market for systems that are powerful enough to run VR applications.
With virtual reality headsets like the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive set to be released in the coming months, initiatives like the ‘Oculus Ready’ and NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX VR Ready programs have been announced to allow consumers to easily identify VR-ready hardware. However, HP is taking a slightly different tack with its VR-certified PCs – the Envy Phoenix desktops are being released as a partnership with HTC instead of Oculus. One of the models will also feature an AMD GPU, while the other pricier model will feature an NVIDIA GPU.
The US$2,000 Envy Phoenix 860-170VX will be equipped with an Intel Core i7-6700K processor, a whopping 24GB of DDR4 RAM, and an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980Ti card. The Oculus Rift only requires a GeForce GTX 970 at minimum, so that’s more than sufficient horsepower.
On the other hand, the cheaper US$1,700 Envy Phoenix 860-170VR features the same Core i7 processor as the NVIDIA model, but will come with an AMD Radeon R9 390X and a more modest 16GB of DDR4 RAM instead.
HP has paid attention to the aesthetics of the systems as well, and both models boast a brushed metal façade with a customizable LED lighting strip running down the center.
The brushed metal front panel features a customizable LED strip down its center. (Image Source: HP)
But because the new desktops are actually tailored for the upcoming HTC Vive, it may be that the Valve-supported Vive has higher minimum system requirements than the Rift. HP was also not constrained by the US$1,500 figure that Oculus said its ‘Oculus Ready’ bundles (Rift and PC all in one package) would cost when it announced the program earlier in 2015.
One further thing to note is that the prices for the above stated configurations do not include HDDs, and you’ll have to add an extra US$155 for a 256GB M.2 PCIe SSD.
Both machines also offer liquid-cooling for the CPU and Bang & Olufsen-tuned audio. The additional cooling and the unlocked CPU bodes well for overclockers, who will probably be able to achieve fairly decent overclocks on the systems.
The new Envy Phoenix desktops are expected to begin shipping in mid-February, but we’ve no word on when they will be available locally yet.
Source: Tom’s Hardware
Our articles may contain affiliate links. If you buy through these links, we may earn a small commission.