InterviewSolution
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Solve : Gaming PC With a Budget Help?? |
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Answer» I'm preparing to switch over from console to PC, but I'm quite new to the individual parts and which brands are good or not. I had a friend build the parts of the computer for me, but I need it to be about 75$ to 100$ cheaper than it currently is. For about $900 more or less you can get a custom made to order game PC with 4 core AMD on a Motherboard with 4GB or RAM and 2TB of hard drive.Which would then be $160 more expensive (despite them needing to save $100) for a less POWERFUL machine...camerongray, what you say is true. A conservative approach is not the lowers cost. The point I wish to make is there is a large area of pitfalls with any DIY PC project. There is a real issue about who takes responsibility for unforeseen failure. How can the OP make a decision not on just price and performance alone? If he encounters a major problem, he might loses hundreds of dollars of his investment. This has been debated elsewhere. What mistakes did you make when building your first PC? Over 200 comments. Most common was not knowing how to turn on the PSU.I've read your replies and changed my build to meet some of them. http://pcpartpicker.com/p/jt9hpg I decided to choose a 6-Core, and I dropped the Mobo down a notch. I also found a friend willing to give me the RAM I have in there, so shave 50$ off the final price. And to answer your question, DaveLembke, I'd mostly be playing newer games. I don't mind playing them on MEDIUM-ish quality, I just want to be sure they run as smoothly as possible. Right now I'm working with 300$ Samsung Pentium computer I bought from a friend, and, as you can guess, it's horrible in gaming. I bought it about a month ago, and by the time I realized just how bad it was it was to late. (I thought, hey, the Xbox One costs about 300$, so this should be just as good, right? No, very much no.) I am looking to play some pretty demanding games, like Planetside 2, Saints Row 4, GTA V, and the mythical Fallout 4 eventually. Would this build be able to handle those, even at Medium quality? ANd it won't bottleneck, will it? I've heard that's a problem. Oh, and Geek-9pm, I have to agree with the others. My friend bought a 1200$ computer, and my other friend's(The one who gave me the RAM) 850$ custom built computer nearly doubles it's performance in EVERY category. Quote from: Pop on August 23, 2015, 01:19:49 PM I've read your replies and changed my build to meet some of them.Good point. Yes, DIY does save money. Just wanted to give you a heads yup. Myself, I have done DIY most of my life. I have had to accept the consequences. Most of the time everything works. But not always. Thanks for the help w/ everything! I'm ready to build! I was joking, get over it. Quote from: Campbbr101 on August 31, 2015, 03:21:47 AM SWIM says you can probably chop off $90 by pirating Windows 10Keep that up and you won't be around here much longer... |
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