For any of our readers that do not frequent computer forums, one of the big draws to various places on interwebs is the unique and custom builds that individuals do to their home PC.  This can vary from new case design, exotic cooling, or tying into a theme (Iron Man) or idea.  Much of the draw is often the story of design in ‘build logs’, where these ‘modders’ report on their successes, failures, ups and downs with the system.  I am not the type to follow build logs, but I often look at the end product with wide eyes, wondering if the individual did commissions.  Some of these builds are all about making an awesome PC or workstation, and some focus on immersion.

So when a retailer comes out with a custom built system (either in-house or via an ODM/OEM) that attempts to offer extreme immersion, my eyes are drawn.  The main one of late to have gathered steam is the Oculus Rift.  As a tester, a writer, and a history in compute, having access to a powerful system that is easy on the eyes, gets the job done and offers multi-monitor is a big plus.  If it doubles up as a gaming experience, then my productivity goes out the window.  Insert the OverclockersUK Infinity Emperor, an offshoot of the 8Pack system launch we recently attended:

First of all, the chair: measuring in at 154x117x193cm, and weighing in at 110kg (225lb, can support gamers up to 250lbs), is designed in a scorpion style via the monitors that are held from the rear.  The seat (and frame) is built upon powder coated Canadian steel (the brackets are 4.7mm thick), using a microfiber cloth seat cover.  The seat is covered by a 5 year warranty in itself, the monitor bracket can support up to three 24” monitors via VESA or a single 30”, and the seat and parts are height adjustable.

 As shown on the picture above, the idea is to be suitable for gamers using keyboard/mouse, as well as a workstation.  Lights are added to detract some glare from the monitors, and the seat is pre-fitted with BOSE speakers both around the seat and under the chair in a 2.1 configuration.  The chair also acts as a USB hub, giving four USB ports, as well as HDMI throughputs for the monitors.  The chair by itself is £4999.99 inc tax, which translates as $6737 pre-tax state side.

The main selling option of the Infinity Emperor is with the PC attached, and monitors.  For the full asking price of £9999.99 inc tax ($13657 pre-tax), the chair comes with three ASUS 24” 144Hz LED monitors (VG248QE) and a pre-overclocked, fully watercooled system with the following specifications:

  • Lian Li D600WB case, Brushed Aluminum
  • Intel Core i7-4770K, overclocked to 4.7 GHz, watercooled
  • ASUS Maximus VI Formula motherboard
  • Geil Potenza 16GB (2x8GB) 2133 MHz C10
  • 2 x AMD Radeon R9 290X 4GB in Crossfire, watercooled
  • Full custom watercooling loop, Mayhems X1 Purple Fluid
  • SSD: Samsung 840 Evo 250GB
  • HDD: Seagate Barracuda 2TB SATA-III
  • BeQuiet Power Zone 1000W 80+ Bronze power supply
  • Microsoft Windows 8.1 64-bit
  • Blue + black braided cabling

Storage/OS is upgradable at cost, although for placing £10k into a system with multi-monitors, I guess I would have preferred a full 32 GB of DDR3-2133 C10.

OverclockersUK is on a streak of building systems designed to be eye catching and seemingly out-of-range for most budgets.  Such is the undertaking (custom building each system), that the lead time for an Infinity Emperor is four to six weeks.  Looks like you might just get it in this side of Christmas. For a series of close up images, flick through the gallery below:

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  • atata - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    3 cm bezels
    in a custom made gaming chair
    No thank you
  • atata - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    Also, why all this supposed end-to-end gaming station tech insists that I'd sit in one pose all the time without moving at all? Wouldn't that be bad for health?
    The actual convenient pose would be that of a nerd from south park WoW episode where you can half-lay at a leasure time and ability to sit straight when shit's going down hard.
  • toyotabedzrock - Wednesday, November 20, 2013 - link

    Did he include monitors designed to works with Nvidia gpus with the system that has two Amd gpus?
  • samflorin - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    A monitor is a monitor no matter what graphics card you have.
  • mapesdhs - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link


    Somewhat stunned that for such a high price, the PSU is a measly bronze model,
    the SSD is only an EVO (surely for that kind of money it should be an 840 Pro),
    and the 2TB is a consumer-grade Barracuda (it should be a much more reliable NS
    model). Plus, it really ought to be a 6-core, 3930K or somesuch, not a 4-core HW,
    or even an X79 board with a 4820K to begin with (better base clock than the 4770K).
    And only 16GB? I think not.

    I like the general concept of the chair & screens, but the PC spec seems pretty lame
    IMO (I won't comment on the GPU choice for fear of sparking yet another back & forth
    rant about AMD vs. NVIDIA).

    Ian.
  • brucek2 - Thursday, November 21, 2013 - link

    Its attention grabbing, but after the novelty wears off is it really any better / any more fun than a desk with the same or better monitor configuration? And which probably offers a lot more work space for a lot less cost?

    Now maybe if it was one of those ultra high end massage jobbies...
  • Navvie - Friday, November 22, 2013 - link

    WTF.... £5k? oh dear.

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