The GUA4700OS is a great starting gaming computer. I say starting in the sense that it has decent specs for the average gamer. The 6-core, 3.5GHz CPU, combined with the Radeon 460 GPU (with approx. 3 GB of VRAM) and 8GB of RAM (which I believe is upgrade-able) run a lot of intensive games at high frame rates - for example, it runs GTAV at "high" graphics with a solid 50-60 FPS. I've heard that the Radeon 460 isn't actually that great, but I don't believe it for a second.
Specifics:
The fact that it comes with its own multi-color LED keyboard and mono-color LED mouse is also fantastic, since it means I don't have to purchase separate ones. Here's a tip for switching colors on the keyboard: Hold FN and press the LED button, and it'll cycle between all the colors autonomously. It also has buttons on the left and right extremities of the keyboard to control various applications, such as starting/stopping music or switching tracks, changing sound volume, and opening Groove Music/Microsoft Edge. The box says that the keys have a 1,000,000 stroke life, which I believe means you can press them 1,000,000 times before the texture on them starts to fade away.
To expand on the mouse, it is truly designed for gaming. First off, the design looks slick and professional. The scroll wheel is also really nice; I think it's made out of rubber and is ridged, so you have a lot of grip and thus control over it. The buttons behind the scroll wheel to increase and decrease DPI (mouse speed) are also extremely handy, allowing you to fine tune your mouse speed on the fly. On the left you have forward and backward buttons - Mouse Button 5 and 4, respectively. You can go back or forth pages easily using them, and even if you don't think they'll be much use it's two extra mouse buttons you can bind controls to. I've already found a use for one - a Push to Talk button for Teamspeak. In front of those buttons is what is defined as "Turbo Fire" by the box it comes in. Haven't found much use for it, except maybe burst fire in FPS games, as it quickly left-clicks twice. Finally there is the button on the left side of the mouse that is a "sniper shot" button. It apparently is a "4000DPI Hold Lock", which in layman's terms means that it locks the mouse speed very low, useful for finely focusing a sniper reticule on someone/something. A white LED is in the mouse towards the back that pulsates slowly - a nice touch. The one issue is that if you have crumbs on your fingers and you grab the mouse, the crumbs may get stuck in the hexagonal grid, and they're a pain to get rid of.
On the subject of the case, it is nice to look at. It has an open end on one side, allowing you to look inside the computer (I'm surprised to see that only a small portion of it actually has parts - maybe to help with cooling/ventilation?) and see how it works. Now, if there is one major downside to this, then it's that THE FANS RUN NON-STOP AT THE SAME SPEED. THEY DO NOT SPEED UP OR SLOW DOWN, WHICH CAN GET PRETTY ANNOYING. If you give it a few weeks, you'll start getting used to it, but I miss the silence in my bedroom. Strangely enough, there aren't any expansion slots to add RAM, but then again, this is what I would consider a starter gaming computer; 8GB of RAM has been plenty, and if I really wanted to, I could remove the pre-installed RAM and add 8GB cards in. It also has a DVD drive, as well as a cool design on front.
In terms of internals, I already went through the CPU, Graphics card, and RAM. The computer has 2 USB ports on the front end of it, as well as an audio and a microphone jack. Just beware that the panel that these ports/jacks are on is off at an angle, and I bumped into a flash drive I had plugged in and broke it. The most notable parts in the back are of course the power supply; 4 more USB ports, 3.0 on top and 2.0 on bottom (useful for permanent peripherals like keyboard, mouse, webcam, etc.); a DVI Dual-Link port (CyberPowerPC recommends you use this to connect to a display); an HDMI port (which is what I'm using for a display, works just fine); and an Ethernet port (which goes up to one gigabit connection).
Overall, this PC is really great. It gets the job done for most medium-end gaming, which is really what it's built for, so going by how well it accomplishes its task, I give it a 10/10. Even with some errors (which are minute nonetheless), I feel this is very worth it. Realizing now I drafted an essay, so if you read the whole thing, then thank you for your time and I hope I helped you make a decision on purchasing this.