PCSpecialist Nebula Star Review
Introduction and Build Configuration
Introduction
If you’ve just read our review of the new Intel Core Ultra Plus processors, you’re probably wanting to get one in your life. Who wouldn’t? We do.
Of course it’s perfectly possible that you then consider that new usually equals expensive. And the current RAM situation is bananas. The Nvidia Blackwell GPUs were hardly made in great numbers either. Put all that together and it seems to be impossible to produce a full system for less than at least one kidney.
Oh ye of little faith. PCSpecialist is famous for somehow managing to keep prices down and quality high. They invented the concept of maximising value in pre-built systems. Before they appeared, some builders would put i3s in Rampage Extremes just to drive the pricing up. With the ability to buy in such bulk that price isn’t as much of an issue as it is for us consumers, PCSpecialist has managed to build a rig – the Nebula Star – that has all the latest technologies whilst still being affordable. More desirable than Joy Division oven gloves.
Any time you can blend Intel’s poster child for affordable gaming with the biggest-selling card in the Nvidia range, you’re bound to have a successful product. We know from experience that PCSpecialist always pick the choicest morsels, and the Nebula Star is no exception. In this case, it was helped greatly by Intel’s shifting of their Core Ultra product range so that the previous Ultra 7 265K is now here as an Ultra 5 250K, but now faster and cheaper.

