Science

You Can Pre-Order an Oculus Rift-Ready PC, Starting Tomorrow

Prices are between $1,000 and $3,000, but is it worth it?

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Before you rush out and buy an Oculus Rift, you should make sure you’ll actually be able to use your virtual-reality future-goggles. For that you’ll need a computer — a really, really good one, specifically. Fortunately, Oculus has partnered with several retailers to release bundle packages with a Rift-ready PC and the Oculus headset and developer kit.

They look pretty cool.

We're still not convinced the one on the left isn't a Decepticon. 

Oculus

But with price tags starting at $999, even with a pre-order discount, are they worth it?

Each bundle includes an Oculus headset and all its peripherals — Xbox controller, two games, sensor, and cables — which we now know will retail for $599. The Oculus’s recommended specs are pretty demanding — NVIDIA GTX 970 or AMD 290, Intel i5-4590, and 8GB RAM. The graphics card alone runs for about $350, sold separately, and the processor is $215, which, added to the $599 Oculus means at the low end of the pre-sale bundles, you’re getting a reasonably good deal. Make sure to factor in though that pre-sale computers will not include other expensive peripherals — monitors, keyboards, and especially an operating system, which will significantly jack up the cost even more. So depending on your current setup, it might be worth it to download the Oculus compatibility tool at the bottom of this page and check where your computer needs improvements to support the Rift, rather than rushing to buy a whole new computer and succumbing to the pre-order madness.

Otherwise, toss some money at Palmer Luckey and get ready to jump into the action on day one.

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