Aria
- Aria Gladiator Inferno review The Gladiator Inferno is built with top-notch components, but it’s expensive£1600
- Aria GLADIATOR i5-Predator GTX review Powerful in its base specification and with upgrades to make it a monster PC, but we're not keen on the i5-Predator's monitor option£915
- Aria Gladiator Infinity 7790 review The Xeon processor is unusual and quick, but this PC is outclassed by same-priced rivals£700
- Aria Gladiator Inspire 3670K review It has plenty of extras, such as Wi-Fi and a Blu-ray drive, but it suffers from poor Windows performance£523
- recommendedAria Gladiator Inspire 3300 review For undemanding users on a budget, this is a great-value choice£420
- Aria Proteus Mirage GTK Family PC review This is a great all-round entertainment PC, but it's not quite the best you can get for the money£850
- Aria Gladiator Proteus 550 review Aria's choice of an AMD processor means it can add interesting extras, but power drain is excessive, and the Edge10 monitor is disappointing£550
- Aria Proteus Anubis HDK review Aria has included some flashy features, such as an SSD for faster booting, but we’d have preferred a bigger monitor instead.£999
- Aria Proteus Vision review AMD Fusion is perfect for a media centre PC, but this little computer from Aria is a bit too big to fit the bill.£450
- recommendedAria Proteus Inspire review The budget AMD processor limits performance and it lacks a dedicated graphics card, but this is still one of the cheapest Blu-ray-equipped PCs available£512
- Aria Gladiator Trident X3 PLUS OC Gaming PC review Despite the overclocked processor and fast graphics card, the Gladiator doesn't have the performance to justify its price.£746