I want one that'll last me for at least 4 years and no crappy Chinese parts. I want to prioritize FPS over resolution. How much should I spend and any part recommendations?
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celacovsci
Molon Labe Domari Nolo - 古い投稿
Although it seems counterintuitive, it's actually cheaper to [i]buy[/i] a PC. However, finding a good one can be a little difficult. I'm putting money in savings account for interest which is a good idea unless the market crashes. -
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Recommendation: Set a budget first. Save up as much as you can until Black Friday. The weeks before Black Friday, scour the ads, websites, and call places to find the best deals. Be ready to jump at the deals you want as soon as they are available. If you are confident you can build a rig yourself, then go for parts and bundle deals of parts. If you aren’t confident that you can build one on your own, then look for places that have a PC builder tool, ideally one that walks you through each part and the price includes building it and shipping it to you. It’s basically a checklist with menu items where you choose which CPU, GPU, cooling, power supply, etc. and each part has an itemized cost. It will tell you if there are compatibility issues when you add a part to your build, and as you add each part it will tell you a running total.
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Mines a Cyberpowerpc with Ryzen 5 3600, Radeon 580 Graphics card, and I have asus gaming monitor VG245 H gaming monitor and I have 16GB ram inside Plus I have logi speakers All for 1,000 something I forgot But um I get high fps when playing on high quality
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Ricochet 049により編集済み: 10/24/2020 12:35:43 PMWhen I finally go civilian again I’m setting aside $4,000. A lot of that will be more than just the tower. Things like a good chair and desk. But I’m going to build one hell of a machine. But realistically 1200 will get you a pretty good set up.
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[quote]I want one that'll last me for at least 4 years How much should I spend and any part recommendations?[/quote] around a thousand should be good don't overspend on storage or ram, it's easy to fall for it. don't buy a pretty case, just one with good airflow and filters use a lan cable directly to your modem if you're gaming dont underspend on your power supply. amd cpu is the way to go ninvidia gpu's are typically reliable and expensive amd is experimental and cheap i started keeping a crashlog out of spite for my 5700 xt[spoiler]+Previous Oct 11 10pm destiny 2, spinning wheel of death after restarts. latest driver reinstalled. 12am d2 crash, full restart required Oct 12 9:30pm d2 crash 10:12pm d2 crash oct 20 5:15pm d2 5:50 d2 6:30 8:20 8:37 11:58 oct 21 8:14pm d2 oct 23 3:57pm d2[/spoiler] Links! https://youtu.be/LyIaxuppBAI http://imgur.com/gallery/0iicKd8 pc part picker . com
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https://pcpartpicker.com/list/vBx7k6 I put together a theoretical PC a while ago that would last for a while. Note that this doesn't include the cost of a case or Windows 10. You would probably end up paying about $900 to $1000 for it.
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I'd say 500 ~ 1200$ is a decent baseline for a simple build that will run most games no issue. Personally, my minimum is 2500$, but that's 'cause I like to go balls to the wall within reason (rgb variants tend to hike up the price).
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$1200 is pretty standard for a good computer Maybe $1500 if you want better parts Resolution kinda depends on your monitor but sometimes high res helps Also if you want 120+ fps you will want a better monitor [spoiler][/spoiler] Don’t skimp on cooling so get a lot of fans Right now AMD has the best graphics cards (i think) Make sure all the parts can function together Good luck