Alienware Aurora R12
So you're looking for a serious gaming rig? The Alienware series isn't cheap, and it's not as good value as constructing your own gaming PC if you know what you're doing. The Alienware series, on the other hand, is the best out there if you want a powerful, elegant pre-built gaming PC with quality components inside. While the quality of RAM and SSDs in typical home PCs don't matter all that much, the quality of a graphics card and all the other extra components needed to keep a gaming PC working efficiently matters, and this is what you pay for with Alienware. Cheaper gaming PCs are available, but the quality of the components within suffers as a result.
For $1100, the Aurora R12 series begins with the fairly meaningless i5 / 8GB RAM / 1TB HDD / Nvidia 1650 Super build. To be honest, that isn't a real gaming PC. For quality Full HD gaming, the R12 for $1929 with 16GB RAM, an i7 K-series processor, and a respectable 3060 Ti graphics card is a good place to start. With this, you may experiment with 4K gaming, but the most demanding games will require considerably more power.
If you want a genuine gaming spec from Alienware, the R12 with an i9 CPU, 32GB of 3200MHz RAM, a 1TB SSD and 1TB HDD, and an Nvidia 3080 graphics card can kill any game at 4K. But boy, do you pay for it, with a starting price of $3100. That's before you factor in a game-grade keyboard and mouse, which will cost another $200, and a decent 4K gaming display, which will most likely cost another $700 or more. So you're not getting much change out of $4000 here, but you're getting one of the most competent gaming machines around. Millionaire playboys may choose the $5129 mega-machine, which has an i9 KF-series processor, an Nvidia 3090, and a staggering 128GB of RAM.
Check Price: https://www.amazon.com/-/es/Alienware-Aurora-R12-Escritorio-sobremesa/dp/B098SYRYH4/ref=sr_1_2?