Mar 25, 2011 07:28 GMT  ·  By

Now that NVIDIA finally unleashed its dual-Fermi adapter, it is not surprising to see it land inside high-end desktops, and Digital Storm has become the latest maker of custom PCs to make this move.

By now, end-users, particularly enthusiasts, will likely have heard that NVIDIA finally supplied the market with its first DirectX 11-ready dual-GPU video controller.

The board in question bears the name of GeForce GTX 590 and has already been customized by various partners of the Santa Clara, California-based company.

Meanwhile, desktop makers were hasty in adding it as an option on their more powerful rigs, one such company being CyberPower.

Now, coming to join the collective of top-tier PC suppliers featuring this adapter is Digital Storm, whose Black OPS and Special OPS have been updated.

Specifically, there are ten machines up for sale that can have one or more than one GTX 590 adapter.

"Our new revamped gaming line with Nvidia's new GTX 590s in Quad-SLI is the most powerful combination of technology we've ever integrated and the performance numbers will absolutely blow away enthusiasts everywhere," remarked Rajeev Kuruppu, Digital Storm's director of Product Development.

Of those ten machines, the Crusader, Scarab, Hyperion and Dreadnought can use either an Intel or AMD CPU, while the Enix, Assassin, TEC Liquid Chilled, Renegade, Syndicate and HailStorm only have Intel processors.

For those that want some information on the card itself, it has two GF110 GPUs, 1,024 CUDA cores, 3 GB of GDDR5 VRAM and a lower noise output than AMD's Radeon HD 6990.

Either way, the updated systems mentioned above can be perused by visiting this page. Of course, whoever might be planning on a machine of this caliber will need to be ready to part with a suitable amount of money, especially knowing that the GTX 590 alone costs around $699.