{"id":183237,"date":"2023-01-11T03:47:09","date_gmt":"2023-01-11T03:47:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/ces-2023-the-pc-gaming-highlights\/"},"modified":"2023-01-11T03:47:09","modified_gmt":"2023-01-11T03:47:09","slug":"ces-2023-the-pc-gaming-highlights","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/ces-2023-the-pc-gaming-highlights\/","title":{"rendered":"CES 2023: the PC gaming highlights"},"content":{"rendered":"
CES 2023 came and went while I was burning through a statutory holiday entitlement in the Welsh countryside, so these highlights of the Vegas tech show’s PC gaming gear reveals may be as much news to me as they are to you. Unless you caught Katharine’s writeup on the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Ti, which I did once I found a smidge of 4G signal. Cheers, chief.\n<\/p>\n
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CES (that’s the Consumer Electronics Show) has always been a festival of the bold, the weird, the dubiously useful \u2013 it’s the kind of place where a man will stand up with an unfalteringly straight face and announce he’s disrupted the Mouli grater. Among CES 2023’s wares: rollerskates for walking, smartwatches that aren’t watches, and a chopping board that puts an attachable screen perilously close to the tips of your knives. If anything, gaming hardware represented the relatively sensible side of the show, with no-nonsense AMD and Intel CPUs launching alongside the least expensive RTX 40 series graphics card yet.\n<\/p>\n