iBuyPower’s Valkyrie CZ-17 has conjured up quite a bit of conflict within me during my time with it. Pardon the cliché, but “never judge a book by its cover” couldn’t be more relevant. You simply ...
The iBuyPower Valkyrie CZ-28 is a gamer's gaming laptop, giving you high-end gaming prowess and little else. The Valkyrie CZ-28 offers potent gaming performance for a lower price, leveraging more ...
The iBuypower Valkyrie CZ-17 ($1,399 list) is a large, purpose-built performance laptop, and there's no doubt that you're carrying a lot of performance hardware with you. It's a true desktop ...
Earlier today iBUYPOWER unveil their new competition-grade gaming systems that involved a partnership with Computer Logic Gaming, and now they're just announced a partnership with AMD that sees their ...
iBUYPOWER builds highly customizable gaming notebooks and then slaps a reasonable price tag upon them. They offer a wide variety of models, ranging in size from 11-inches to 17-inches. Once a strictly ...
iBuyPower has unveiled a new range of gaming notebooks, it has created in the form of the new Valkyrie series. The new Valkyrie gaming notebooks are fully customisable and the first to be unveiled is ...
iBuyPower was in news sometime back with its Chimera 4 and Erebus GT desktops, and now they are turning their focus to the gaming segment with the introduction of new Valkyrie Gaming Laptops. Gamers ...
The iBuypower Valkyrie CZ-17 ($1,399 list) is a large, purpose-built performance laptop, and there's no doubt that you're carrying a lot of performance hardware with you. It's a true desktop ...
The Valkrye CZ-17 is enormous. Weighing in at 6.85 pounds and with a very chunky chassis, it's a desktop replacement not a commuting computer (and that's a legitimate difference - you won't be ...
From the laptops on your desk to satellites in space and AI that seems to be everywhere, I cover many topics at PCMag. I've covered PCs and technology products for over 15 years at PCMag and other ...
Given all the frenzy around ultrabooks, Microsoft's Surface, and the low power potential of future chips like Haswell, you might think that desktop replacement-class laptops had fallen out of favor ...