Note: I did think about putting this on Up For No Visitors but thought it probably wasn't worth it. And I couldn't be bothered to proof it.
PC's are rather like elephants. Big clumsy beasts that you really wouldn't want in your living room. OK so the Xbox 360 is hardly discreet but at least it's smaller than the kind of PC you'd want to play games on.So most people use a games console as their gaming device of choice in their living room. But what happens if you want to play more than just the official sanctioned games? I'm not talking about (legitimate backups - Ed) but rather having a quick blast of Zub on a Speccy emulator. With the previous generation of consoles the answer was simple, buy an X-Box and mod it. However this was rather an inflexible solution that left you reliant on a small number of emulators being supported.
You could of course build a low spec mini PC. But this could be expensive and a pain. Or you could buy a Mac Mini if you were prepared to sell a kidney. But now there is an answer and it's called the Revo from Acer.
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Good things come in small packages.The first thing that strikes you about the Revo is the size. Its the thickness and height of two standard retail DVD cases, with slightly more depth. The unit comes bundled with a stand and a wireless keyboard and mouse, both of which look and feel like cheap rip-offs of the Apple equivalent. Oddly the wireless receiver isn't built into the main unit and you have to plug a tiny receiver into a spare USB socket.
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Tesco Value Apple Wireless Keyboard. The unit has 5 USB ports (4 after you've plugged the wireless dongle in), E-SATA, network, a memory card slot as well as analogue VGA and HDMI. One important note is that most TV's will have "overscan" active for the HDMI input which is where the edges of the picture get chopped off (this is a legacy feature from analogue days where the picture edges may contain stuff not intended to be seen). If you cannot disable this on your TV you will be better off with VGA. There is no DVI socket.
Some online reports suggest the Revo is fanless. Not so, it has a small fan that vents out of the top of the unit. But we're talking laptop levels of exhaust, not X-Box levels. Power comes from a laptop style PSU keeping the size of the main unit to a minimum.
The Revo also comes with a VESA mount that allows you to mount the unit behind your TV (providing it isn't wall mounted). This is a pretty neat party trick and makes the unit invisible
Windows 7 boots quickly, although you will find yourself having to remove a great deal of useless bundled software from the machine. You will be promoted to create some system disks in case of problems. This is all very well but the Acer wants to burn these to DVD, a slight problem on a machine that doesn't have an optical drive. Luckily I do have an external USB Blu-Ray drive so was able to burn my backups but how many people own external USB optical drives. This is a serious oversight by Acer and could be resolved by allowing you to save ISO's to a USB stick.
Still these are minor niggles. The machine itself seems to run quite snappily despite the inclusion of Microsoft's latest operating system. Standard emulators such as for the CPC, Spectrum and Amiga don't seem to tax the CPU to a great degree and the freeware games we tested such as Gridwars ran without issue at full HD resolution of 1920x1080.
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The Revo can run Amiga games such as Frontier without issues, even if you want to emulate an A4000.So can it run MAME? Well the answer is both "yes" and "no". We tried the latest version of the arcade emulator we suffered from slight slowdown and stuttering audio. Although the Revo had CPU time free, the problem appears to be that MAME only uses a single CPU core. However after taking some advice from the experts on our forum I downloaded a copy of MAME that was a couple of years old and it ran fine. It appears that MAME has become more bloated with time and in actual fact many of the mobile versions of MAME also run on older code. The bad news is that games such as Space Harrier will push the single core MAME uses to the max, the good news is that that the machine is dual core and there appears to be just enough grunt into the Atom for games such as Space Harrier to run at full screen without glitches.
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A CPU graph just after having run Space Harrier.In terms of modern PC games, you had better forget about it. Reports online suggest 3D games running at as little as 4 fps. This is a cut down system, it can do most things but the NVIDIA chipset is relying on the comparatively weedy Atom processor to do the work. While it can render most 2D material without a problem, it will have serious issues in 3D. Remember, many people buying gaming PC's will spend more money on their GPU than this system costs in total!
So in terms of having a machine under your TV that can emulate all the machines from your past and has a huge hard drive to hold them, the Revo is top notch. Add a USB joystick and you are away.
A basic older spec Revo running Linux can be picked up for as little as £130 although be aware that the older Atom processors are not dual core. Our review unit has a beefier Intel Atom 330 processor, 2gb of RAM, 250gb hard drive and Windows 7 coming in at £240 (March 2010). You'll need that extra grunt to be able to run MAME. The newer more expensive models do have improved CPU power which is beneficial for emulation, especially since the NVIDIA graphics are offloaded to the CPU to save cost. Having used Windows 7 on the Revo, it is worth the few quid extra as it runs far better than you have any right to expect. Vista versions are cheaper, and Linux cheaper still.
The Revo is a great package if you are looking for a discreet PC that you can place in your living room. You can emulate pretty much any classic machine you want and it's all provided in a tiny package.
967 Bananas.