My only question is whether its really a 2700 or a 3700.
—Patrick
It will never be InWin Allure pretty, though.That's a really pretty case.
—Patrick
It will never be InWin Allure pretty, though.That's a really pretty case.
The Ryzen? It's really a 2700.My only question is whether its really a 2700 or a 3700.
—Patrick
The graphics card (5700xt) was current generation, so I wondered if the CPU was a typo. The 2700 may not be the latest, but it is still plenty capable for today’s stuff. And they’re cheaper now that the 3000’s are out.The Ryzen? It's really a 2700.
Thank you! And I'll be sure to double check before I buy.That's definitely a pretty good build. I wasn't trying to make you feel worse, just joking about the very common perception that PC building is hard, when the reality is that these day's it's no harder than putting up a tent - with a lot less physical exertion.
That said, if you're gonna put this off for several months because of money... you might want to re-check your list for price fluctuations immediately before you order. There might be a better deal. Especially for the video card.
This page is my mantra: https://www.videocardbenchmark.net/gpu_value.html
Oh, yeah, no, I thought about doing the 3700, but I think the 2700 will be powerful enough for what I need and cheaper, so. ://// That's why.The graphics card (5700xt) was current generation, so I wondered if the CPU was a typo. The 2700 may not be the latest, but it is still plenty capable for today’s stuff. And they’re cheaper now that the 3000’s are out.
And that case is HUUUUUGE. You could practically live in it if only the side panel wasn’t clear. Glass houses and all.
—Patrick
Awkwardly running around in the background... in costume?YOU KNOW. I thought about it, but?? I dunno. Would you guys wanna watch? I'll still probably ask my friends' friend to help me, so it would probably just be me and him, with me awkwardly running around in the background. Yay, nay?
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Haha, I mean I could.Awkwardly running around in the background... in costume?
Heck, maybe that should be your streamer niche. Doing everyday stuff in costume. Might attract weirdos, though. Well, even more weirdos than us.
I have 2TB SSD because I am a hoarder and hate deleting things ever. (I also have an even bigger secondary drive :|)960 GB SSD?!? Almost a TB SSD. God damn.
I mean, there's precedent.Awkwardly running around in the background... in costume?
Heck, maybe that should be your streamer niche. Doing everyday stuff in costume.
The 2700 is more or less equivalent in speed to the 3600. The 3600 is a smidge faster, but the 2700 has two more cores and is $50 less, so yeah, excellent value.The 2700 is an excellent value, and as you say, pretty much powerful enough for just about anything, including VR (especially when paired with a 5700xt).
I like the motherboards that include a header where you assemble all your cables onto a block and then just plug the block into the board. SO much easier.the place you might have the most issues (depending on your case) is plugging in all of the case wires into the motherboard spots for them.
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This is literally the shittiest part of building a computer, and I hate it every time I have to do it. Some cases organize the wires better than others.
Shh...nobody tell Dave about the ~4TB Kingston DC450R.960 GB SSD?!? Almost a TB SSD. God damn.
I ain’t fucking around!! (And I don’t want to have to upgrade it for a long while. :/ )960 GB SSD?!? Almost a TB SSD. God damn.
This.I have 2TB SSD because I am a hoarder and hate deleting things ever. (I also have an even bigger secondary drive :|)
thank you for the suggestion! I like my choice of the Corsair H115i though (especially when paired with the 2700). And I’ll have 3+ RGB fans in there as well - Antec Prizm 140 and 120’s.VERY nice build. Better than mine, actually.
I would recommend a better cooler than stock. The MSI Core Frozr L is top notch.
This chair looks like it has great... neck support, I guess?
If you're not sure which CPU to get (and you've decided not going to keep whatever one you already have), then that means you probably want a Ryzen R5 3600.Suggestions?
Pfft. Casual.Man, I can kick myself. I bought the parts for a decent gaming rig back in February. It is all still in the boxes on my kitchen table. Just after doing 8 hours at work, I really don't feel like effing with more computer related stuff.
If I go the parts route, well I'll be looking at a MB, cpu, OS install, ssd or ssd/hdd combo, memory, graphics card. I'll have to double check what's in my acer memory wise but i'm pretty sure its ddr3 and not 4, and maybe a power supply. between the 2 pcs I know I have a working dvd drive. That SSD is very nice but that would probably be siphoning money from the mb/cpu and/or GPU.If you're not sure which CPU to get (and you've decided not going to keep whatever one you already have), then that means you probably want a Ryzen R5 3600.
No, really. It's such a value that tech sites constantly recommending it became a meme.
Its successor isn't supposed to be ready until sometime in Q3, so if you need a new system now, that's probably the way to go.
You can get a decent 2TB SATA SSD for about $225 these days. I chose a 2TB Seagate BarraCuda 120 (model ZA2000CM1A003, US$250) based on its purported MTBF in order to replace the 1TB HDD in Cranky's older Athlon64 X2 machine, and of course it makes a huge difference.
Pfft. Casual.
--Patrick
what would you recommend in the next month or three for a graphics card in the 250 range give or take?
what would you recommend in the next month or three for a graphics card in the 250 range give or take?
Gas and I may disagree on other things, but on this we are united. The GTX 1660-based family of cards are THE best bang-for-buck-and-Watt out there right now (barring the exceptions I mention in the post I linked).Right now, the GTX 1660 super is your best bang for the buck in the $250 range.
A viable AMD alternative is the RX Vega 56.
I bought the 1660 Ti. I am happy that you receive it so well.Gas and I may disagree on other things, but on this we are united. The GTX 1660-based family of cards are THE best bang-for-buck-and-Watt out there right now (barring the exceptions I mention in the post I linked).
The only thing I will disagree with is that I would pick the 1660 Ti over the 1660 Super (can get a refurbished Ti for only $20-30 more than a Super these days) because the Ti has more cores and TUs enabled than the Super. In other words, while the two cards may have relatively equivalent performance, this is because under the hood the Super has a turbocharged V6, but the Ti has a V8. To put it another way, since they both use the exact same chip at their heart, a 1660 Super is just a "normal" 1660 which has been overclocked and tweaked to get it near the performance level of a stock 1660 Ti, but then there's nothing saying you can't get a stock Ti and then overclock that to get performance that consistently beats that of the 1660 Super. However, if you absolutely can't afford the price premium, then yes, the 1660 Super would be my #2 choice.
Also going to add that the previous generation 1070, 1070Ti, 1080, and 1080ti actually perform better than any of the 1660 cards (though they do use more power), so if you find a sub-$200 deal on one of those, consider grabbing it.
DO NOT get a Vega 56 or Vega 64 for gaming. Yes, they will perform better than either of the 1660 cards, but they do so at something like twice the power/heat budget of the 1660s.
--Patrick