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PERFECTION in television.

It was worth the episodes that were a drudge to get through. That was magnificent writing, production, acting, editing and foley.

It didn't go out with a whimper like the Stargate/Trek series do.

Just watch the FRAKKIN AWESOME FINALE of Battlestar Galactica! my god what a great to end to one of the best shows in my time!

I have it ready to watch. It's my favorite show of all time, nothing will ever be better or even equal. And that is why I am having trouble getting myself to watch the finale. :(

PERFECTION in television.

It was worth the episodes that were a drudge to get through. That was magnificent writing, production, acting, editing and foley.

It didn't go out with a whimper like the Stargate/Trek series do.

This is EXACTLY the reason we don't get intelligent, thought provoking science fiction any more... because they don't have to put the thought into writing it, not when they can just dress up generic soap and call it science fiction and get pludits like this.

What's that about polishing a turd?

Is there a good explanation for why there were two "earths"?

No, apart from lazy writing and no firm sense of direction.

I think she answered the question herself in a previous episode. The old Kara Thrace was dead and she accepted who she was. I think she was real, all human, and just a screwed up girl altogether. I think she really died, then was reintroduced ambiguously as something supernatural, like a soul that had been resurrected. Something that the hybrids were plugged into as they always knew her role, and Anders last words were "See you on the other side" as if he knew she would be there waiting for him. Kara was Kara, and Kara died in Season 3.

So like I said before, she died and was brought back without any explanation. It was a big mystery that still has no explanation.

Starbuck's story ties into the original series though, which was the point I think. In the original series, Starbuck wound up on a planet alone with a woman, and a Cylon. He eventually repaired the Cylon (and they became friends) and fathered a child with the woman, who he then sent to the Colonial fleet with the woman and he stayed on the planet. But what wasn't told, was in an unproduced episode of the series, where the Ship of Lights beings (angels) had tested Starbuck to see if he was worthy of joining them and becoming an angel. The original series had the Ship of Lights, and the angelic beings on it, and interjected the religious, or supreme beingness just like our reimagined series has done here.

So in essence, RDM paid homage to that storyline by more or less making Starbuck here an angel, literally. Kara Thrace died at the end of season 3, and was resurrected by whatever force you want to call it, to lead Humanity to it's end (or the Cylons take your pick). Then when he journey was over and she finished what she had to do, she returned to wherever, to be with Anders.

Now I see people complaining online about how RDM just added his anti-technology, pro-religion etc agenda into the show and ruined it for some people. I think they look to much into the show as it is, but he was trying to make a statement. Maybe that's why he and a few others from BSG were at the UN the other day....

I'm not saying what you described is wrong or not what Moore inferred, but the problem I have with this is that most of it is guess work, assumptions and something you have to come up with on your own. There were a few hints that give any possible insight to all of that and the show did not do even a decent job of explaining it. Instead of really getting to the meat of within the show itself, Moore had to explain it in an interview, and did so without any definite clarity. For me that was cheap, bad writing and mismanagement over one of the biggest mysteries the show had left. There was an obvious connection between Kara and Cylons, but it was never explored nor explained, and none of what I saw seemed to make her the harbinger of death, but instead it seemed like she was the harbinger of life, complete opposite of what was always said about her.

I don't like to work with assumptions, and if a show is going to open up a can of worms, I expect it to at least try to explain itself; imho, BSG barely did that because we're still left guessing.

PERFECTION in television.

It was worth the episodes that were a drudge to get through. That was magnificent writing, production, acting, editing and foley.

It didn't go out with a whimper like the Stargate/Trek series do.

Yeah, was even better then Buffy The Vampire Slayer and Angel's finales.

Loved the Centurion action.

Also anyone else notice that asides from the old model Centurions, they also payed homage to the original series when anders is flying the fleet into the sun, it plays theme music from the original show.

My only real disappointment from something unexplained is where is D'Anna? Like they unboxed her to identify the final 5, and she was on the nuked earth, but then she disappeared.

yes, you really will want to watch the DVD's, not just to pick up the bits you missed, but because they putting extended versions of the last few shows on as well

http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/en...nell-olmos.html

* The DVD version of "A Disquiet Follows My Soul" will be about 10 minutes longer.

* The DVD version of "Islanded in a Stream of Stars" will be about 15-20 minutes longer.

* The DVD version of "Daybreak," the series finale, will be about 15-20 minutes longer.

Also that website has a great interview with Moore and the cast about the finale.

Me? I'm waiting for the big blu-ray boxset they are supposed to be putting out in July with all the seasons and then rewatching them all.

I just finished it, I cried a bit lol I am ****ed as well. I don't like how they all broke up at the end, I wanted them to all stay together.

I am so flushed about the show, that I know there are about 20 questions I have about un-answered things but I can't even think of them.

Also I have each box set, waiting on the last one now. Might also pick up the full collection on bly-ray as well.

Is there a good explanation for why there were two "earths"? The first one they discovered (the radiation planet) had to be ours because they followed the star charts, which were the same constellations as ours, to get there. Plus did they not also show the North American continent. Then the second planet was also clearly ours, with the African continent and the flash-forward.

Yeah it was explained. As they are fond of saying "all of this has happened before and will happen again." They found Earth from the last time which is where the final five came from. This time they found a new planet they chose to call Earth also. Makes sense to me.

Yeah it was explained. As they are fond of saying "all of this has happened before and will happen again." They found Earth from the last time which is where the final five came from. This time they found a new planet they chose to call Earth also. Makes sense to me.

But both planets were our Earth, i.e. the same planet not just by name.

But both planets were our Earth, i.e. the same planet not just by name.

Incorrect, there are two Earths in the series. The first Earth is where Starbuck's corpse was found. The second Earth is the planet Starbuck jumped the ship to in the finale.

Two totally different planets.

Incorrect, there are two Earths in the series. The first Earth is where Starbuck's corpse was found. The second Earth is the planet Starbuck jumped the ship to in the finale.

Two totally different planets.

Right, but they are both "our" Earth. The first, had the same constellations as ours (and if I'm remembering correctly, North America), and of course the similarities between where they landed and our New York City. The second had our African continent and our present (their future).

I loved the episode, and apart from some script elements, namely finding a way to conclude the Opera House drama which seemed trivial in the least when revealed, these 3 things really stood out to me. I'll nitpick these cause they don't really take away from the quality of the finale but just seemed out of place and continuity.

1. Starboard launch tube still has a "Cylon War" museum banner and artifacts of the first war. Despite four years of being on the run, did they never refit the starboard launch bay to be operational... I never noticed but ever shot was from the port side in the series of craft launches. You would think that with a mutiny and genocide, that there would have been at least one person who flushed that banner out the airlock.

2. Raptor strike team FTL jumps out of the Starboard launch bay... Boomer's raptor FTL jump was bad enough and she had left the bay, you would think 5 or 6 doing it would rip it off the side of the ship.

3. Lee's strike team gets through the opening that Galactica rams into the Cylon colony, disgard their helmets after finding atmosphere, then backtrack their way back to Galactica later? Hope they found those helmets where they left them.

1. it was surprising they never restored it, they probably dident have enough resources to do it, they had no replacement ships and half of there vipers already came from the museum. After the damage done to the museum in valley of darkness (season 1) you would have thought it would be in more dissarray.

2. It did show the side of the flight pod being blown out, but the damage did seem very minimal compared to when boomer done it. I was more disapointed with when galactica jumped while being in contact with the cylon colony as there was no visible damage at all.

3. When they first took off there helmets i wonderd how they planend to get back, at first when they arrived on galactica i thought wtf, but when you think about it, they had expected to get boarded by the cylons (hence the fireteams like baltar and caprica) and Lee's team did come up behind the cylon so they probally got in to the ship in the same way as the cylons were which was not the same way as they got out. The cylons must have used an airlock as there were skin jobs with them.

It reminded me of the ending to Babaylon 5, slowed everything down and tied up loose ends in a more character driven manner. but it did feel like they left too many loose ends things they said they would explain then never,

I was disapointed that the only time we got the original series theme in the episode was when the ships were going in to the sun and it was somewhat cut short.

I did not like how hoshe and lampkin were used. hoshe has always been a forgetable background character until season 4 where they tried to show his relationship with felix and suddenly hes the highest up character that aint going so he gets to lead the fleet. The same as lampkin as great a character as he was he dosent seem like he should have been handed the presidency.

What exactly was Kara, and were people chasing down a rabbit hole when they assumed her father was Daniel, the missing 8th model cylon?

Ron Moore: Daniel is definitely a rabbit hole. It was an unintentional rabbit hole, to be honest. I was kind of surprised when I started picking up [that] speculation online.

For those of you who don?t know, there was a deep part of the cylon backstory that had to do with one of the cylons that was created by the final five [called Daniel. Daniel] was later sort of aborted by Cavill? it was always intended just to be sort of an interesting bit of backstory about Cavill and his jealously. A Cain and Abel sort of allegory. Then people really started grabbing on to it and seizing on it as some major part of the mythology. In couple of interviews and in the last podcast I tried to go out of my way to say ?look, don?t spend too much time and energy on this particular theory,? because it was never intended to be that major a piece of the m

David Eick: Eick: It?s like Boxey in thaMoore:b>Moore: Kara is what you want her to be. It?s easy to put the label on her of ?angel? or ?messenger of God? or something like that. Kara Thrace died and was resurrected and came back and took the people to their final end. That was her role, her destiny in the show? We debated back and forth in the writers? room about giving it more clarity and saying definitively what she is. We decided that the more you try to put a name on it, the less interesting it became, and we just decided this was the most interesting way for her to go out, with her just disappearing and [leave people wondering

We see Galactica jump away from the Colony. Are we to assume there are a lot of ****ed off Cavills out there still, or were they destroyed?r wereMoore:ed?

Moore: The final [cut] came out a little less clear on that than I intended?. It was scripted and the idea was that when Racetrack hits the nukes?the nukes come in and smack into the colony?it takes the colony out of the stream that was swirling around the singularity and [the colony] fell in and was destroyed. I think as we went through the [editing process], when we kept cutting frames and doing this and that, one of the things that became less apparent was that the colony was doomed. The intention was that everyone who was aboaAt what point did you decide to make it Earth-of-the-past that we were going to wind up on, and what was your reason for that?at wasMoore:for that?

Moore: We decided that a couple of years ago. I don?t think we ever really had a version of the show where we [were] in the future or in the present, those didn?t seem as interesting. In the early [development of the show], we would talk about the fact that we would see a lot of contemporary things in the show from language to wardrobe to all kinds of production design details. That only made sense to us in terms of a lot of things that we see in the show and we feel are taken from our contemporary world are actually theirs to begin with. [They] somehow spread down through eons and came to us through the collective unconsciousness. Or, more directly, [as when] Lee said we would give Eick:ter part of ourselves.

Eick: There was a time when we were talking about ?they land, and its Pterodactyls and Tyrannosaurus Rex.? But the idea that they were part of the genus of humankind seemed like the right?Moore:rdable!?way to do that.

Moore: We also had this image of Six walking through T<Moore:d the original Earth?><Moore:d the original Earth?

Moore: The backstory of the original Earth was supposed to be that the 13th tribe of cylons came to that world, started over and essentially destroyed themselves. There was some internecine warfare that occurred among the cylons themselves, which was another repetition in the cycle of ?all of this has happened before and all will happen again.? Even they, who were the rebels that split off, [had] enough of humanity in them as cylWhy did Cavill decide to kill himself?b>Why did Cavill decide to kill himself?

Moore: Cavill killing himself actually came from Dean Stockwell [the actor who played Cavill]. As scripted in that final climatic CIC battle, Tigh was going to grab Cavill and fling him over the edge of the upper level and he was going to fall to his death. Dean called me and said ?y?know, I just really think that, in that moment, Cavill would realize the jig is up and it?s all hopeless, and he should just put a gun in his mFor the actors, what was the last scene that you filmed and what was the mood like on the set?ene that you fMary McDonnell: mood like on the set?

Mary McDonnell: My last scene was Laura Roslin?s last moment in the Raptor. That was about 3:45 am on a very small set. I think I was one of the first people to wrap?she died and we all hugged, and my son and I went to the airport and went back to LA? It happened quickly, it was set to happen a week later and the schedule was changed, so suddenly it was over, Edward James Olmos: very much like the show for me.

Edward James Olmos: My last day was when I was on the mountainside and it was the last moment that I was on camera. It was quite an experience all the way around, that moment in time. I think everybody had a real easy time [acting] with the emotions that we had at the very end, it?s pretty honest all the way around. The last time that I saw Starbuck and Lee was thMcDonnell:e I saw them [in the show]. Pretty intense.

McDonnell: But we?re here, and we?reWith the use of ?All Along The Watchtower,? are you trying to get at some notion that there is some universal consciousness that goes back as far as the human/cylon races? arrival?ciouMoore:es back as far as the human/cylon races? arrival?

Moore: The notion is sort of how you posited it. The music, the lyrics, the composition, is divine, eternal, it?s something that lives in the collective unconsciousness of everyone in the show and all of us today. It?s a musical theme that repeats itself and crops up in unexpected places. Different people hear it and pluck it out of the ether and write songs. It?s a connection of the divine and the mortal. Music is something that people literally catch out of the air and can?t really define exactly how they composed it. [so] here is a song that transcends many eons and many different people and cultures Eick:s, and was ultimately reinvented by one Mr. Bob Dylan here on Earth.

Eick: It was a simple way, I thought, to communicate clearly the idea [the show is not set in the future.] That this is a story about a culture that gave birth to ours. There was an episode in season one in which Helo and Sharon are running for their lives. They hole up in a diner and there?s a cylon centurion cornering them. For the longest time we planned to have an Moore:n the diner that woEick:Yesterday?, or whatever we could afford?

Moore: Not ?Yesterday.?

Eick: ?Probably not ?Yesterday.? Something from The Guess Who perhaps. I think we felt it was too soon. It would confuse things and?people would just be thrown by it, but we were thinking about it that far back, that music would be a great way to say to the audience that it follows [a] cyclical theme of ?this has all happened before and will happen again.? This culture is the one that gave birth to ours, so that all the colloquialisms and all the slang that you hear and the behaviThere?s been a lot of talk about how setting an end date for a scripted serial helps to recharge it. Did you find that true? of talk aMoore:ing an end date for a scripted serial helps to recharge it. Did you find that true?

Moore: In terms of the writers? room it certainly focused us. We made the decision that fourth season was going to be the last season once we got to the end of the third season. We had writers? retreats, and we had dedicated sessions to say ?this is the end, what?s the last story, what?s the final arc?? It really made everybody very focused and very specific about exactly how this was going to line up. Part of the motivation to make it the final season was that we didn?t want to get to the place where we felt like the ship was keeling over and we were having a problem. We all inEick:felt that the show had the reached the third act by the time the show got to the end of that third season.

Eick: Going back a year before that, Ron and I sat down for our biannual ?what the hell do we do this year meeting?? Heading into season three there was a real sense of creative frustration. We wanted to expand the show and ? find a new ways [of] story telling. [so season three] became what we call the cylon-centric season. It?s when we introduced the base ship, it?s when we introduced some new cylons. It gave the show life, but after a year of that, when we sat down heading into season four, it was a much shorter conversation. It was basically ?okay, what if we end it? What if we just decide it?s over?? Let?s call this?the dovetailing season. If we know that going in, how would that inform story telling decisions?? So it was a very early decision. I remember from my perspective going into that

McDonnell:as a different energy on the set. There was tremendous focus and concentration that I was getting from the entire ensemble.

McDonnell: Part of what was extraordinary about that is as you are able to view [the end approaching] you can then kick into gear and plot your finish. What that ends up doing is simplifying things for you. You know where your head is and you can let go in many moments were you probably would have worked very hard [before, but] you didn?t need to. So a lot of us felt a kind of simplification. A kind of humility that came over us and that gives you a lot of eOlmos:st know where you are going and you are proud to be a part of it. And you let go. That was the expeMcDonnell:ny of us had.

Olmos: WOmos:ing at the very beginning of the show and we all, 13 of us, sat down in my trailer?

McDonnell: He had the biggest trailer.

Omos: ?it was beautiful! And we sat down as we discussed the possibilities. I talked to them about making sure we understood that if, by chance, this situation was to move forward and we were to do this as a series, and this was to go on to for one year, four years, ten years, who knows, that we had to understand what that meant? I just knew that?the story would have a beginning, a middle and an end, and that we had to pace ourselves.

So at the end of the third season, beginning of fourth season, we had a meeting, and we were told then that this was going to be the final season. Everybody got very depressed?I don?t think any of the actors wanted to stop the show? But we had hit the end, we were going into the fourth and final act. And we knew it. So we talked about the very first time we ever got together, and we said it?s like a marathon. In marathon you have to start off fast, really really intensely strong, your first mile has to extraordinary. Then the next 24 miles have to be consistent?. And then the last mile has to be the strongest mile that you?ve run the whole 26 miles?To win it, your final mile has to be your stronIn the last scene, are ?Six? and ?Baltar? angels or demons?b]Moore:ow we knew where were going? I think that led to some of our strongest performances.

In the last scene, are ?Six? and ?Baltar? angels or demons?

Moore: I think they?re both. We never try to name exactly what the ?Head? characters are?we called them ?Head Baltar? and ?Head Six? all throughout the show, internally. We never really looked at them as angels or demons because they seemed to periodically say evil things and good things, they tended to save people and they tended to damn people. There was this sense that they worked in service of something else. You could say ?a higher power? or you could say ?another power,? [but] they were in service to something else that was guiding and helping, sometimes obstructing, and sometimes tempting the people on the show. The idea at the very end was that whatever they are in service to continues and is eternal and is always around. And they too are still around?and with all of us who are the children of Hera. They continue to walk among us and watch, and at some point they may or may not intercede at a key moment.

- source

This is EXACTLY the reason we don't get intelligent, thought provoking science fiction any more... because they don't have to put the thought into writing it, not when they can just dress up generic soap and call it science fiction and get plaudits like this.

Each to their own I suppose. When have we ever had thought provoking Sci-Fi? They are television programmes, for entertainment. Yes they are like soaps, after all it's a story, but a story set in space.

It actually made a change there was none of that heavy moral crap and prime directives and pseudo utopian futures al la Star Trek.

Also it was a long story, not an episodic formulaic farce like Stargate Atlantis. "All is well, advert break, Problem, advert break, much gnashing of teeth, advert break, problem solved, credits"

And do you know what? even with their flaws I loved Star Trek, Stargate, Atlantis, Babylon 5 and Battlestar.

Simply because they were Science Fiction. Entertainment with Space Ships = happy me.

Wow! What a finale. The idea that we're all descendants of Hera, a half-human/half-cylon, is quite daunting. Of course, it isn't real. But it's interesting nonetheless. The part that surprised me the most was when they landed on Earth and looked at an early hominid species. The doctor said that their DNA is compatible so breeding with them was possible. However, the chance of human life evolving on another planet is, as Baltar said, "Astronomical." Nevertheless, it was an interesting episode. I'm glad they found a lush and diverse planet to live on. To be honest, I was quite disappointed when they supposedly found Earth in ruins. Thankfully, that wasn't the only Earth.

Kudos to Ron D. Moore and everyone that was involved with Battlestar Galactica. It has been, and always will be, one of my favourite sci-fi shows of all time.

So like I said before, she died and was brought back without any explanation. It was a big mystery that still has no explanation.

I'm not saying what you described is wrong or not what Moore inferred, but the problem I have with this is that most of it is guess work, assumptions and something you have to come up with on your own. There were a few hints that give any possible insight to all of that and the show did not do even a decent job of explaining it. Instead of really getting to the meat of within the show itself, Moore had to explain it in an interview, and did so without any definite clarity. For me that was cheap, bad writing and mismanagement over one of the biggest mysteries the show had left. There was an obvious connection between Kara and Cylons, but it was never explored nor explained, and none of what I saw seemed to make her the harbinger of death, but instead it seemed like she was the harbinger of life, complete opposite of what was always said about her.

I don't like to work with assumptions, and if a show is going to open up a can of worms, I expect it to at least try to explain itself; imho, BSG barely did that because we're still left guessing.

I felt like there were a lot of things wrong with the finale, but the deal with Kara's being wasn't one of them. The last segment of the show tried to directly relate the characters to our existence and our Earth. By doing that, much as mankind has debated through the millenniums, is that there is no definitive proof of God. Angels, prophets, and messiahs performing miracles is the nearest connection mankind will ever have to God, so you can't have Ron Moore say this is the same Earth you live on but oh, by the way, here is God and explanation for Kara.

I liked it as a whole, and I loved some parts of it, but the finale was by no means perfect.

I thought Kara's story was wrapped up pretty well, and didn't need further explanation. 'She' was brought back for a purpose, and when that purpose was reached, she disappeared.

I found it a bit hard to believe that all the survivors would just agree to give up technology and revert to a primitive lifestyle. Then again, maybe they were so fed up with everything, they just wanted to put everything behind them and probably forget it.

It's strange though, I didn't feel quite as sad as I thought I'd feel for the end of the show. No "Damn, there's no more of it", which usually happens after the finales of shows I've really invested time in. Angel, Now & Again, TNG, Andromeda (pure crap as it was in its final years), The Pretender, etc.

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So, if you lose access to your phone, computer, or password manager, you would still be able to log in using the passkey stored on your security key. Think of it like keeping an extra special necklace piece on a tiny keychain, stored somewhere safe. The website still has the matching half for that security key, but your half is safely stored inside the little key. A passkey does not automatically exist on every device you own. It lives wherever you save it. If your half is stored on one device, then that device is the one that has the matching piece. For example, if you create the passkey on your Windows computer and it is only saved to that computer, your iPhone does not automatically have that same half. If you create it on your iPhone and it only stays on that iPhone, your Android phone does not automatically have it either. That is where password managers come in. A password manager can act like a protected jewelry box for your passkeys. Instead of your half of the necklace being locked to only one device, the password manager can securely sync that half to your other approved devices. For example, Apple Passwords and iCloud Keychain can sync passkeys between your Apple devices. Google Password Manager can sync passkeys with your Google account. But password managers such as 1Password and Bitwarden can sync passkeys between everything, your phones, tablets and computers. Now, you might ask: “What happens if I lose access to the device that has my passkey?” That depends on where your passkey was saved and what recovery options the website gives you. If your passkey was synced through a password manager, you may be able to sign in from another device that has access to that same password manager. For example, if your passkey is saved in iCloud Keychain, Google Password Manager, 1Password, or Bitwarden, another approved device may still have access to it. If your passkey was saved only on one phone, computer, or security key, and you lose that device, then you may not have your half of the necklace anymore. In that case, you would usually need to use the website’s backup login or account recovery options. A lot of websites that support passkeys still let you fall back to your regular password. So if you lose access to your passkey, the site may still let you log in with your password, a code sent to your email, a text message, a recovery code, or some other account recovery process. That is convenient, but it is also important to understand: if the website still allows password login, then your password still matters. Passkeys are safer than passwords, but if your account still has a password as a backup, you should still use a strong, unique password and turn on two-factor authentication if the website offers it. This is why it is a good idea to have more than one safe way back into important accounts. For example, you might keep your passkey in a syncing password manager, add a second trusted device, save recovery codes somewhere safe, or set up a backup security key. A passkey is very secure, but just like a real key, you need a backup plan in case you lose access to it. Now, you might ask: “What stops a hacker from copying my half of the necklace?” That’s the important part: your half is protected. It is not something you type in, and it is not something the website gets to keep. Think of your half as being locked inside a tiny safe on your phone, computer, security key, or password manager. That safe only opens when you approve it with your fingerprint, face, PIN, or device password. When you log in, the website does not need to see your half. It only needs proof that your half matches its half. Your actual half is not handed over to the website. This is different from a password. With a password, you type the secret into the website. If you type it into a fake website, the hacker now has it. With a passkey, you are not typing your secret into the website. Your device is proving you have the matching half without giving the half away. That also helps protect you from fake websites. If someone makes a fake login page that looks like the real site, your device can tell it is not the real match. It will not use your passkey there. Now, could someone use your passkey if they stole your device, got into your password manager, or somehow unlocked the safe that holds your half? Yes, that is why your device password, PIN, fingerprint, face unlock, and password manager security still matter. But a hacker cannot just steal your passkey from the website or trick you into typing it into a fake page like they can with a password. That is why passkeys are safer than passwords. The two matching pieces have to come together, like two lovebirds who were once separated and are finally reunited.
    • Newegg offers insane combo deal on Amazon Prime Day 2026 that beats Steam Machine by Sayan Sen Building a PC is undoubtedly difficult nowadays but with this epic combo deal, Newegg is trying to make it as easy for you as it is possible. If you are making a new one or even upgrading an old system to a new Windows 11 device, this combo bundle is truly unmissable as you get AMD's Ryzen 9800X3D, a compatible X870 motherboard, a 240mm AIO liquid cooler and finally a Samsung 990 PRO SSD all for under $1000 (purchase link under the specs table down below). This should beat out the newly launched Steam Machine from Valve in terms of performance and performance per dollar especially if you are willing to set Linux up on it. Essentially with this combo you will get the AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D 8-core 3D V cache CPU, Samsung's 990 PRO 2TB NVMe SSD, the MSI MAG X870 TOMAHAWK WIFI ATX Motherboard, and finally the Cooler Master Elite Liquid 240. Thanks to that massive vertically stacked L3 cache, the X3D desktop processors, including the 9800X3D, also come with the benefit of not needing fast memory. Even DDR5-5600 should be plenty for it. The technical specifications of the Ryzen 7 9800X3D are given in the table below: Specification Value Architecture Zen 5 Cores / Threads 8 / 16 Base Clock 4.7 GHz Max Boost Clock Up to 5.2 GHz L1 Cache 640 KB L2 Cache 8 MB L3 Cache 96 MB Total Cache 104 MB CPU Core Process TSMC 4nm FinFET I/O Die Process TSMC 6nm FinFET Socket AM5 Default TDP 120W Max Temperature (Tjmax) 95°C Thermal Solution Not included Memory Type DDR5 Max Capacity 256 GB Memory Speeds 2x1R: DDR5-5600 2x2R: DDR5-5600 4x1R: DDR5-3600 4x2R: DDR5-3600 PCIe Version PCIe 5.0 PCIe Lanes (Total/Usable) 28 / 24 USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps) 4 USB 2.0 1 Graphics Cores 2 CU RDNA 2 Frequency 2200 MHz DisplayPort over USB-C Yes Overclocking Unlocked Up next we have the tech specs for the MSI MAG X870 TOMAHAWK WIFI Motherboard: Specification Value Chipset AMD X870 CPU Support AMD Ryzen 9000 / 8000 / 7000 Series Desktop Processors Socket AM5 Memory Slots 4 × DDR5 UDIMM Maximum Memory Capacity 256GB Memory Support DDR5 8400–5600 MT/s (OC), DDR5 5600–4800 MT/s (JEDEC) Integrated Graphics Outputs 1 × HDMI 2.1 FRL (up to 8K 60Hz) 2 × USB4 Type-C with DisplayPort 1.4 HBR3 (up to 4K 60Hz) Expansion Slots PCI_E1: PCIe 5.0 x16 (CPU) PCI_E2: PCIe 3.0 x1 (Chipset) PCI_E3: PCIe 4.0 x4 (Chipset) Audio Realtek ALC4080 Codec 7.1-Channel USB High Performance Audio Supports up to 32-bit/384kHz playback on front panel S/PDIF output M.2 Slots 4 × M.2 M2_1: PCIe 5.0 x4 (CPU, 22110/2280) M2_2: PCIe 5.0 x4 (CPU, 2280/2260) M2_3: PCIe 4.0 x2 (Chipset, 2280/2260) M2_4: PCIe 4.0 x4 (Chipset, 2280/2260) SATA Ports 4 × SATA 6Gb/s RAID Support RAID 0, 1, 5, 10 for M.2 NVMe storage devices Rear USB Ports 4 × USB 2.0 3 × USB 5Gbps Type-A 2 × USB 10Gbps Type-A 1 × USB 10Gbps Type-C 2 × USB4 40Gbps Type-C Front USB Headers 4 × USB 2.0 4 × USB 5Gbps Type-A 1 × USB 20Gbps Type-C LAN Realtek 8126-CG 5G LAN Wireless Wi-Fi 7 (M.2 Key-E module pre-installed) Supports 2.4GHz / 5GHz / 6GHz bands Up to 5.8Gbps Supports 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax/be Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4, MLO, 4KQAM Internal Power Connectors 1 × 24-pin ATX Power 2 × CPU Power Connectors 1 × PCIe 8-pin Power Connector Fan Headers 1 × CPU Fan 1 × Combo Fan (Pump/System) 6 × System Fan RGB Headers 3 × Addressable V2 RGB (JARGB_V2) 1 × RGB LED (JRGB) Other Internal Headers 1 × EZ Conn-header 2 × Front Panel Headers 1 × Chassis Intrusion 1 × Front Audio 1 × TPM 2.0 Header Debug Features 4 × EZ Debug LEDs 1 × EZ Digit Debug LED Rear I/O Ports Clear CMOS Button Flash BIOS Button HDMI 2 × USB 40Gbps Type-C 1 × USB 10Gbps Type-C 4 × USB 10Gbps Type-A 3 × USB 5Gbps Type-A 4 × USB 2.0 5G LAN Port Wi-Fi/Bluetooth Antenna Connectors Audio Connectors Form Factor ATX The Samsung 990 PRO is a PCIe Gen4 NVMe SSD and still one of the fastest drives available today for under $500. Speaking of fast, sequential reads and writes are rated at 7450 MB/s and 6900 MB/s, respectively. The random throughputs for reads and writes are 1400K IOPS and 1550K IOPS, respectively. The 990 PRO is based on Samsung's 7th Gen V-NAND flash, and it too is TLC. It packs 2 gigs of LPDDR4 DRAM cache, which helps the random performance. The endurance rating for this is 1200 TBW (terabytes written), which should be sufficient for most users. The Samsung 990 PRO is compatible with the PlayStation 5, but if you are going to use the 990 PRO on a PC, check out the Samsung Magician app that lets you track your drive's health, update its firmware, customize various settings, and more. The tech specs are given below: Specification Value Interface PCIe Gen 4.0 x4, NVMe 2.0 Form Factor M.2 2280 Controller Samsung In-house Controller NAND Flash 3D TLC DRAM Cache 2GB LPDDR4 Sequential Read (Max) 7,450 MB/s Sequential Write (Max) 6,900 MB/s Random Read (4K) Up to 1,400,000 IOPS Random Write (4K) Up to 1,550,000 IOPS TBW (Endurance) 1,200 TBW MTBF 1,500,000 hours Operating Temperature 0°C to 70°C Storage Temperature -40°C to 85°C Shock Resistance 1,500G / 0.5ms Heatsink No Get the combo deal at this link: AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D, Samsung 990 PRO 2TB, MSI MAG X870 TOMAHAWK WIFI motherboard, Cooler Master Elite Liquid 240: $784.99 + $25 off with promo code FTTF77: $759.99 (Sold and Shipped by Newegg US) Good to know This Newegg deal is U.S. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • I heard from a lot of people that driver support for the latest games when RDNA first came out (Radeon 5000 series) was pretty bad, but if you didn't buy the card on day one, or were not trying to play the latest titles, then you were isolated from that issue. Other than that, it's been good and only getting better.
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