Acer Aspire TC-710
Intel I5-6400 @ 2.71GHz
8GB RAM
eVGA 1050 SC 2GB GDDR5
CORSAIR CX650M PSU
Windows 10 Home 64-bit
BenQ ZOWIE RL2755 - Input lag is super important to me as someone who primarily games on a CRT. I initially had the 24" stated below, but this 27" is my current primary. I now want bigger, though. I love the builtin speakers for when I'm lazy, as well as the aspect-ratio adjustment so that I don't have to mess up my display just to run things in any other setting than the native 16:9 1080p resolution. I just wish it was black instead of a really dark gray.
BenQ RL2455HM - the monitor that made me accept HD gaming, even if the panels of today will never compare to a good ol' tube.
Logitech G502 Proteus Spectrum mouse - it was tinier than I expected when I bought it, but it is extremely comfortable whilst providing incredible gaming skill that unfortunately feels out of my hands - kind of like driving a modern supercar with all sorts of behind-the-scenes assists as opposed to cars of the 80's and such with no power steering and a beautiful gated shifter with a heavy clutch. Regardless, it's the best and most comfortable mouse I've ever used, and it looks fantastic. My old Logitech G5 feels like a bus by comparison.
Logitech G610 Orion keyboard - I've found that I love Cherry Reds the most, from typing to gaming, and while I enjoy RGB lighting, I'd probably be kicking myself for not having pure white since I'd never want to use any other colour in any realistic scenario. I can never go back to a membrane keyboard, even if I still find them to feel good.
Logitech G933 Artemis RGB headphones - I have a decade-old set of Logitech X540 surround-sound speakers that still function spectacularly, but I've mostly been using headphones for anything other than YouTube background noise over the last several years - when I'm not just using my monitors' builtin speakers, that is. I don't use the RGB lighting for immersion and battery preservation, but it's a nice feature to have just to show off.
Logitech G440 mouse pad - because why nawt when I have the rest of the collection. Ironically, it's smoother when brand new as opposed to being worn in where the pad is then actually smooth as opposed to its rough and gritty production. Quite the contrary to my 20-year-old corporate mouse pad with a builtin calculator which feels like rolling over butter after its decades of use. If that wasn't gray, small, and not a Logitech product to match my other peripherals, I'd still be using it.
Logitech G27 steering wheel set - an awesome entry point when you want a proper driving wheel with a clutch and gearshift for an authentic experience. Spend any more than what it's worth, and you might as well buy a real car with a real manual transmission and get way more enjoyment.
I also have three different external HDDs, to protect all my data from the last couple decades, but mostly to keep many copies of my FPS over its many stages of development. I lose my project, I lose my life's work.
I don't know why I gravitate towards pre-built PCs when I always love custom rigs with awesome cases, windows and RGB LEDs and tons of power and such, but it always seems to be the case that I buy a pre-built, swap in both a GPU and PSU, and call it a day. My PSU is overkill for my hardware; my GPU doesn't even need its own power cable as it runs directly off of the power provided by the motherboard. Considering my PSU is modular, my case is devoid of cables as a result, making for a really clean setup. I haven't really been a PC gamer for the last 8 years or so, though. As long as I can run Half-Life 2 and Need for Speed Shift maxed out at a blistering frame rate, I'm happy.