HotHardware Holiday Buyer's Guide 2008

To fully enjoy all that your PC has to offer, you’ll want to hear every detail from those games and movies. Check out these two sound cards that are sure to please your ears. Or, if you feel your money is better spent elsewhere, then look for a motherboard that offers acceptable onboard sound capabilities.

Creative X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Professional - $130

You’ll hear more realistic sound effects and 3D positional audio with this upgrade card. The Creative X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Professional also supports Dolby Digital Live encoding. For games such as Quake 4, Battlefield 2, Prey, and Unreal Tournament 3 that can take advantage of X-RAM, you’ll get an additional performance boost as well. In terms of connectivity, the X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Professional has line in / microphone in (shared 1/8" mini jack), speaker out (4x 1/8" mini jacks), optical out (TOSLINK), optical in (TOSLINK), and Intel HD Audio Compatible Front Panel Header (2x5pin).
 

ASUS Xonar DX - $76

For a slightly less expensive sound card, let us suggest the ASUS Xonar DX 7.1. This card delivers fine-tuned audio quality and technologies like Dolby Home Theater and DS3D GX for crisp and clear audio and rich sound effects. With a 116dB SNR (Signal-to-Noise Ratio), this card delivers up to 35 times cleaner audio in comparison to many onboard motherboard audio solutions that offer only an 85dB SNR.
 


Jennifer Johnson

Jennifer Johnson

Jennifer grew up around technology. From an early age, she was curious about all things related to computers. As a child, Jennifer remembers spending nights with her dad programming in BASIC and taking apart hard drives to see what was inside. In high school, she wrote her senior term paper on her experiences with building custom computers.

Jennifer graduated from the Jeffrey S. Raikes School of Computer Science and Management at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln. After college, she began writing full-time for various PC and technology magazines. Later, she transitioned to the Web. In these roles, Jennifer has covered a variety of topics including laptops, desktops, smartphones, cameras, tablets, and various consumer electronics devices. When she's not playing with or writing about the latest gadget, Jennifer loves to spend time with her family, capture memories with her camera, and scrapbook.

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