
Unlike this underground house in Las Vegas, Kenton Varda’s amazing LAN Party House was designed for long gaming sessions. Featuring a basement with 12 PCs that are built into the walls and neatly fold away when not in use.



That’s not all, the home also has DDR pads in the floor, hidden beneath carpeted panels, an upstairs office with 6 PCs that fold up, an engine room that holds all of the hardware, lots of extra hardware components in case something breaks, an above ground living room used for relaxing when not gaming, and a roof deck boasting expansive views of Austin, Texas.
- AMD Ryzen 5 3600 3.6GHz (4.2GHz Max Boost) CPU Processor | 500GB NVME SSD – Up to 30x Faster Than Traditional HDD
- NVIDIA Geforce GTX 1650 4GB GDDR6 Graphics Card (Brand may vary) | 16GB DDR4 RAM 3200 Gaming Memory with Heat Spreader | Windows 11 Home 64-bit
- 802.11 AC | No Bloatware | Graphic output options include 1 x HDMI, and 1 x Display Port Guaranteed, Additional Ports may vary | USB Ports Including...






The 22 game machines (including monitors, cables, and peripherals) cost about $75,000 in total. The house overall was a 7-digit number. Sorry, I’m not comfortable being any more specific than that. I actually find it funny how cheap computers are. The cabinetry around the game stations cost a similar amount to the computers powering them. Think about that,” said the owner.
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