PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition (2012)

 & Matthew Murray Managing Editor, Hardware

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

Our Expert
LOOK INSIDE PC LABS HOW WE TEST
65 EXPERTS
43 YEARS
41,500+ REVIEWS
Whether it's for home or school, the Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition (2012) is a fine general-purpose desktop at an attractive price. - Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition (2012)
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

Whether it's for home or school, the Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition is a fine general-purpose desktop at an attractive price.

Pros & Cons

    • Fine overall performance.
    • Includes discrete video card.
    • Arrives bloatware free.
    • Limited hard drive space.
    • No front-panel USB 3.0 ports.

Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition (2012) Specs

Graphics Card AMD Radeon HD 7750
Operating System Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium
Optical Drive DVD+RW (Plus)
Processor Intel Core i5-3570K
Processor Speed 4.3
RAM (as Tested) 8

We all know that absolutely no one purchasing a computer for school would dare consider its prowess at anything other than strictly academic tasks. All that matters is a healthy processor and lots of memory—the very notion of also having a discrete video card capable of enhancing games (only after all the schoolwork is done, naturally) would never cross anyone’s mind. So we’re positive that most serious students will be scandalized by the 2012 revamp of the Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition, which for $999 (direct) bridges the gap between those two worlds in a way that would do any teen or parent proud. So if you can see past your outrage at this fusion of gaming and processing prowess, you might just see an impressive everyday system. All this earns it our Editors' Choice for midrange desktops.

Design and Features
Like most Velocity Micro systems (such as the latest Raptor Z90  and last winter’s Vector Holiday Edition ), this latest Vector Campus Edition  uses a variation on the company’s classic MX2-W chassis: brushed-aluminum exterior, crisp edges, windowed side panel, and striking blue interior lighting. It’s a familiar look, but it’s one that quietly allures and one that works. The aesthetic doesn’t carry over to the included keyboard and mouse, alas—they’re both basic black plastic—but you can’t have everything.

On the component side, however, you can be forgiven for thinking you can. The Campus Edition is decently equipped with current midrange hardware that packs a punch without punching a hole in your budget. The processor is a 3.4GHz Intel Core i5-3570K, which has four processing cores but no Hyper-Threading support to give it control over eight simultaneous threads, but it’s been overclocked to a healthy 4.3GHz. A nice 8GB of RAM comes preinstalled, with two of the four RAM slots remaining free so you can add more down the line if you want. The video card uses the relatively powerful mainstream AMD Radeon HD 7750  chipset. You don’t get a ton of hard drive space—a mere 1TB—but there are two 3.5-inch bays free for future expansion. A DVD burner and multiformat card reader round out the external storage options.

Front-panel ports are fairly limited: the obligatory headphone and microphone, FireWire, and USB 2.0—unfortunately, no USB 3.0. You get a better selection on the rear panel, with two USB 3.0 ports, four USB 2.0 ports, eight-channel analog audio, PS/2, and Ethernet joining the DisplayPort, HDMI, and two DVI ports on the video card. USB dongles granting 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 2.1 connectivity come pre-inserted as well.

One thing you don’t get: bloatware. Like most boutique manufacturers, Velocity Micro ships its systems clean, so when you boot into the 64-bit edition of Windows 7 Home Premium, you won’t find any clutter at all on your desktop. Open Office 3.4 and Microsoft Security Essentials are available as no-cost upgrades so you can also have basic productivity and malware-protection functionality right out of the box.

The Campus Edition is covered by a one-year parts-and-labor warranty, and an extra $69 gets you a one-year VelocityCare warranty that also includes on-site service.

Performance
Velocity Micro Campus Edition (2012)Regardless of why you need (or want) to use your system, the Campus Edition offers a compelling spread of performance across applications. It didn't nab the top spots in our Futuremark PCMark 7 all-around-system or CineBench R11.5 rendering tests—those went to the Acer Predator AG3620-UR21P  (4,551 versus 4,041 and 7.52 versus 5.17 respectively). But the Campus Edition managed the lowest time in its class in both HandBrake (56 seconds, with the nearest competition the 1 minute 3 seconds of the Asus Essentio CM6870 ) and Adobe Photoshop CS5 (2 minutes 40 seconds, with the Acer Predator a close second with 2 minutes 47 seconds).

Velocity Micro Campus Edition (2012)

In gaming, the Campus Edition was almost as good: It was the champ at Futuremark 3DMark 11, in both the Entry (5,222) and Extreme (1,098) presets, and at 1,280-by-720-resolution Crysis with Medium graphical details (108 frames per second, or fps). The Alienware X51 ruled the roost with Lost Planet 2 at 1,280 by 720 and middle-quality graphics (86fps) and 35fps at 1,920 by 1,080 with high-quality graphics (the Campus Edition competed with 72fps and 28fps respectively); the Alienware also surpassed the Velocity Micro at Crysis at 1,920 by 1,080 with Very High details (22fps versus 21fps), but that's not exactly a crow-worthy victory).

Other systems out there might surpass the Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition (2012) in certain areas—the Alienware X51 is slightly better at gaming, the Acer Predator AG3620-UR21P at some processing chores. But the Campus Edition earns its place as our new Editors’ Choice for midrange desktops because of its strong commitment to balancing all the disciplines. It’s an ideal well-rounded desktop for pursuing your well-rounded education.

More Desktop reviews:
•   Maingear F131 (2018)
•   Acer Predator Orion 9000
•   Dell Inspiron Gaming Desktop (5680)
•   Acer Aspire S24
•   MSI Vortex G25VR
•  more

Final Thoughts

Whether it's for home or school, the Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition (2012) is a fine general-purpose desktop at an attractive price. - Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition (2012)

Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition (2012)

4.0 Excellent

Whether it's for home or school, the Velocity Micro Vector Campus Edition is a fine general-purpose desktop at an attractive price.

About Our Expert

Matthew Murray

Matthew Murray

Managing Editor, Hardware

Matthew Murray got his humble start leading a technology-sensitive life in elementary school, where he struggled to satisfy his ravenous hunger for computers, computer games, and writing book reports in Integer BASIC. He earned his B.A. in Dramatic Writing at Western Washington University, where he also minored in Web design and German. He has been building computers for himself and others for more than 20 years, and he spent several years working in IT and helpdesk capacities before escaping into the far more exciting world of journalism. Currently the managing editor of Hardware for PCMag, Matthew has fulfilled a number of other positions at Ziff Davis, including lead analyst of components and DIY on the Hardware team, senior editor on both the Consumer Electronics and Software teams, the managing editor of ExtremeTech.com, and, most recently the managing editor of Digital Editions and the monthly PC Magazine Digital Edition publication. Before joining Ziff Davis, Matthew served as senior editor at Computer Shopper, where he covered desktops, software, components, and system building; as senior editor at Stage Directions, a monthly technical theater trade publication; and as associate editor at TheaterMania.com, where he contributed to and helped edit The TheaterMania Guide to Musical Theater Cast Recordings. Other books he has edited include Jill Duffy's Get Organized: How to Clean Up Your Messy Digital Life for Ziff Davis and Kevin T. Rush's novel The Lance and the Veil. In his copious free time, Matthew is also the chief New York theater critic for TalkinBroadway.com, one of the best-known and most popular websites covering the New York theater scene, and is a member of the Theatre World Awards board for honoring outstanding stage debuts.

Read full bio