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Velocity Raptor Z95A Gaming PC Shows What Leaving It to the Pros Looks Like

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Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A

Pros

Excellent gaming performance

Tidy interior

Ample upgrade options

Cons

Considerably more expensive than DIY

So-so front connections

If you want an extreme gaming PC without bloatware or the tedious work of configuring and building it yourself, the Velocity Micro SX3 Raptor Z95A stands out as a compelling option. It’s pricey, but the folks at custom builder Velocity Micro put together a tidy system using almost exclusively standardized parts, leaving the door open for future upgrades. While it’s frequently cheaper to build on your own — at the very least, you save on the cost of labor — the Raptor Z95A manages to be fairly competitive with other systems in its class, like the $3,899 Corsair Vengeance a7400 or $4,699 Vengeance i8200, though it leaves room to be undercut by systems like this $2,750 Asus ROG G700 with an RTX 5080 of its own.

The Z95A is built around a few core elements that don’t change, no matter the configuration. It’s centered around a Gigabyte Aorus Pro X870E motherboard and Velocity Micro’s SX3 case — a 55-liter tower that fits ATX and EATX motherboards. Closed-loop liquid cooling is also a central feature, with a 360mm radiator and the option for RGB-lit fans. 

Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A

Price as reviewed $3,999Size 55 liter ATX (19.3 x 18.9 x 9.25in/490 x 480 x 235 mm)Motherboard Gigabyte Aorus Pro X870ECPU 2.5GHz AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3DMemory 64GB DDR5-5600Graphics 16GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 FEStorage 2TB NVMe M.2 PCIe Gen 4 SSD Connections USB 2.0 (x2 rear), USB 3.0 (x2 front), USB-C 3.2 Gen 2×2 (x1 front), USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A (x4 rear), USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A (x3 rear), USB4 (x2 rear), 3.5mm audio connector (x1 front, x2 rear), Optical S/PDIF (x1 rear), 2.5GbE (x1 rear), Antenna x2, HDMI (x1 on motherboardNetworking 2.5GbE, Qualcomm FastConnect 7800 Wi-Fi 7 802.11be, Bluetooth 5.4Operating system Windows 11 Home 24H2

The configurations start at $2,549. At that price, you get a Ryzen 5 9600X processor with 32GB of DDR5-5200, a 750-watt 80 Plus Bronze power supply, a 1TB Kingston NV3 SSD, and an RTX 5060 8GB. (The “A” in Z95A refers to AMD. There’s a Z95i based on Intel CPUs.)  Our test configuration bumps up a Ryzen 7 9800X3D with 64GB of DDR5-6000, an 850-watt 80 Plus Gold power supply (an MSI MAG A850GL in this case), a 2TB Samsung 990 Pro SSD and an RTX 5080. When the unit was prepped, it was listed at $3,999, though currently it’s sitting at $4,644, partly because of volatile component prices.

That’s far from the peak of the pricing. Higher CPU, GPU, memory, and storage options can ramp the price up dramatically. Bumping up our test configuration up to the AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D and RTX 5090 alone would raise the price to just under $7,000.

Josh Goldman/CNET

If you tried to build it out piece by piece yourself, the configuration would cost roughly $3,000. This would be with largely identical parts, though calls for a different case and cooler, as Velocity Micro uses its own exclusive case and cooler. The extra $1,000 (or $1,644 at the current price) may be worth it for some, as it comes with some peace of mind that the cooling has been done effectively, the hardware is backed with a warranty, and the cable runs are kept neat. If you configure it yourself, you’ll also have to bark up the tree of graphics card pricing. Unless you can get your hands on an RTX 5080 FE at its $1,000 retail price (or used), you might see your price leap up considerably.

Clean but not too eye-catching

“Micro” might be in the name, but there’s nothing small about the Velocity Micro SX3 Raptor Z95A. The 55L SX3 case sits in the border between an ATX full and mid tower, able to accommodate as large as an E-ATX motherboard. As configured here, there’s plenty of room inside the case thanks to the modest proportions of the RTX 5080 Founders Edition; it will be a little tighter with beefier GPU designs.

Josh Goldman/CNET

The case doesn’t stand out. It’s a rather stately black build with a healthy combination of solid aluminum, perforated aluminum, and a glass side panel. There are a few plastic elements around the front, but they don’t stick out or make the case seem cheap. The front grille offers plenty of air for the three intake fans while keeping the perforations small and tightly packed. Hair and dust are still likely to get sucked in, but the grille should keep a good deal out still. Velocity Micro’s 360mm radiator attaches at the top of the case and gets three more 120mm fans exhausting through it. 

This placement is smart, as it avoids feeding the graphics card pre-warmed air from the radiator. There’s one more 120mm exhaust fan in the rear. While this does mean there are more exhaust fans than intakes — creating the risk of negative pressure that could pull dust into the system from gaps in the case — the air resistance provided by the radiator should help prevent this. The front fans also have a mostly clear line to the back of the case, so they blow hard enough out the back to keep dust from entering through the less-filtered holes there.

Josh Goldman/CNET

Velocity Micro has done tidy work with the cable management. Cable runs are kept mostly out of sight, appearing only for the short distance they have to travel to plug into the motherboard and other components. Surprisingly, the backside of the case, behind the motherboard, isn’t a complete rat’s nest either. The lack of pre-wired SATA cable runs is a little disappointing, especially when the system includes two 3.5-inch drive bays in the basement of the case, near the power supply, and two 2.5-inch drive mounting points. I wasn’t thrilled to see the hoses for the CPU cooler touching the GPU radiator fins, either. The hoses may degrade from contact with the hot metal, and the airflow out of the back of the GPU is likely impacted. 

Josh Goldman/CNET

The motherboard offers a great selection of ports, including 2.5Gb Ethernet to go on top of the Wi-Fi 7 support. The front I/O is limited with just two USB-A ports, a USB-C port, and a 3.5mm combo jack. The case allows the front I/O to sit either on the left side near the bottom or up at the top edge.

The muscle 4K gaming calls for

The Z95A is an extreme-performance system. It pairs some of the most powerful gaming PC hardware on the market for both high-frame-rate and quality 1080p and the horsepower to handle 4K gaming with cranked-up settings. In all of our game benchmarks, the system was happy to run at an average of more than 150fps at 4K, and that’s without even tapping into the advanced Nvidia DLSS optimizations available to it, like Frame Generation. Monster Hunter Wilds’ benchmark ran at 64fps in 4K with Ultra settings and DLAA enabled. Dialing back to 1080p but leaving other settings unchanged, it hit 120fps on average. That’s without Frame Generation, which Monster Hunter Wilds encourages you to enable. 

Josh Goldman/CNET

It can also keep on trucking even under demanding loads. In 3DMark’s Steel Nomad stress test, the Raptor Z95A sustained its frame rate over 20 runs with a top score of 8285 (83fps) and a lowest score of 8139 points (81fps) — that’s just some run-to-run variability, not a steady decline in performance. The fans kick up a bit to sustain this performance, but they’re not very loud or shrill. 

Beyond gaming, the Raptor Z95A holds up in high-end everyday operation, and it’s well-suited to AI applications with the RTX 5080 tucked inside. It has some of the fastest CPU performance I’ve seen from systems I’ve tested for CNET, although some of the top-end Intel chips still rival it for single- and multi-core performance. 

Naturally, all this power comes with some heat, and it spits plenty out the top and rear. But the important thing is that it’s spitting that heat out. The CPU manages to level off around 52 degrees Celsius, and the GPU levels off around 72.

Working inside the case shouldn’t be terribly difficult, as it’s quite spacious. And because Velocity Micro has used all standardized components, your upgrade options will be basically limitless. The AM5 platform of the motherboard should be supported for a while yet, and the case has plenty of room for much beefier graphics cards in the future. All in all, it’s a fast, solid build that should allow for enough upgradability to offset the high price over time.

Geekbench 6 (single core)

Lenovo LOQ Tower 17IRR9 (90WY0000US) 2,273Lenovo Legion Tower 5i 26IRB8 (90UT001AUS) 2,427HP Omen 35L 2,656Minisforum AtomMan G7 Ti 2,833Dell XPS 8960 2,948Lenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 34IRZ8 3,062Alienware Area-51 3,149Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 3,303

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Geekbench 6 (multicore)

Lenovo LOQ Tower 17IRR9 (90WY0000US) 9,947Lenovo Legion Tower 5i 26IRB8 (90UT001AUS) 12,091HP Omen 35L 12,745Minisforum AtomMan G7 Ti 16,959Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 18,338Dell XPS 8960 18,699Lenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 34IRZ8 18,735

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Cinebench 2024 CPU (multicore)

Lenovo LOQ Tower 17IRR9 (90WY0000US) 749Lenovo Legion Tower 5i 26IRB8 (90UT001AUS) 783HP Omen 35L 961Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 1,321Minisforum AtomMan G7 Ti 1,431Dell XPS 8960 1,554Alienware Aurora R16 1,806Alienware Area-51 2,313

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Shadow of the Tomb Raider gaming test (1080p)

Lenovo LOQ Tower 17IRR9 (90WY0000US) 142Lenovo Legion Tower 5i 26IRB8 (90UT001AUS) 148Minisforum AtomMan G7 Ti 174HP Omen 35L 174Alienware Aurora R16 226Alienware Area-51 248Dell XPS 8960 250Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 362

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance (FPS)

Guardians of the Galaxy gaming test (4K)

HP Omen 35L 139Alienware Area-51 177Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 187

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance (FPS)

3DMark Fire Strike Ultra

Lenovo LOQ Tower 17IRR9 (90WY0000US) 6,007Lenovo Legion Tower 5i 26IRB8 (90UT001AUS) 6,232Minisforum AtomMan G7 Ti 7,277Alienware Aurora R16 9,927HP Omen 35L 16,426Dell XPS 8960 17,525Alienware Area-51 21,463Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 21,665

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

3DMark Speed Way (DX12 Ultimate)

HP Omen 35L 7,335Lenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 34IRZ8 7,425Dell XPS 8960 7,520Alienware Area-51 8,717Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 9,009

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

The Rift Breaker CPU (1080p)

HP Omen 35L 131Alienware Aurora R16 163Alienware Area-51 166Lenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 34IRZ8 184Dell XPS 8960 202Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 268

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Procyon Stable Diffusion XL

Lenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 34IRZ8 3,444HP Omen 35L 3,656Velocity Micro Raptor Z95A 4,257

Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Configurations

Alienware Area-51 Microsoft Windows 11 Pro; 3.7GHz Intel Core Ultra 9 285K; 64GB DDR5-6400; 16GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 graphics; 2TB SSDAlienware Aurora R16 Microsoft Windows Pro; 3.2GHz; 3.2GHz Intel Core i9-14900KF; 32GB DDR5 5,600MHz RAM; 12GB Nvidia RTX 4070 graphics; 1TB SSDDell XPS 8960 Microsoft Windows 11 Home;3.4GHz Intel Core i714700K; 21GB DDR5 RAM; 16GB Nvidia RTX 4080 Super graphics; 1TB SSDHP Omen 35L Microsoft Windows 11 Pro; 4.2GHz AMD Ryzen 7 8700G; 64GB DDR5 3,600MHz; 16GB Nvidia RTX 4080 Super graphics; 2TB SSD + 1TB SSDLenovo Legion Tower 5i 26IRB8 (90UT001AUS) Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.5GHz Intel Core i5-144400F; 16GB DDR5 5,600MHz RAM; 8GB Nvidia RTX 4060 graphics; 1TB SSDLenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 34IRZ8 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 3.2GHz Intel Core i9-14900KF; 32GB DDR5 4,400MHz RAM; 16GB Nvidia RTX 4080 Super graphics; 1TB SSDLenovo LOQ Tower 17IRR9 (90WY0000US) Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.5GHz Intel Core i5-144400F; 16GB DDR5 RAM; 8GB Nvidia RTX 4060 graphics; 1TB SSDMinisforum AtomMan G7 Ti Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.2GHz Intel Core i9-14900HX; 32GB DDR5 5,600MHz RAM; 8GB Nvidia RTX 4070 graphics; 1TB SSDVelocity Micro Raptor Z95A Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.5GHz AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D; 64GB DDR5 RAM; 16GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 graphics; 2TB SSD

Velocity Raptor Z95A Gaming PC Shows What Leaving It to the Pros Looks Like
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