Building a new PC

February 8th, 2020

I need a new PC one that can play next-gen games on a tight budget. I already have a decent monitor so just need some advice on CPU, Motherboard, GFX card, RAM. I have £500-600 to spend I’m looking on going down the AMD/ATI route.
Answer #1
Top range i5, 2GB HD7870 Republic of gamers motherboard with 8gb of kingston and some liquid cooling is my recommendation I made this a year ago and its beast.. a hell of alot cheaper now.
Answer #2
https://teksyndicate.com/forum/build-pc They will give you good useful advice
Answer #3
AMD fx08320, Gigabyte GA-970A-DS3P or if you can have some more money then Asus sabertooth is a good board. Corsair H80i. Corsair 16GB DDR3 Vengeance and an ATI R9 280x OC been checking while writing and should come to your budget
Answer #4
AMD fx08320, Gigabyte GA-970A-DS3P or if you can have some more money then Asus sabertooth is a good board. Corsair H80i. Corsair 16GB DDR3 Vengeance and an ATI R9 280x OC been checking while writing and should come to your budget
I was thinking about getting an R9. I will check them out cheers
Answer #5
I was thinking about getting an R9. I will check them out cheers
They are worth it, I bought the 280x DirectCU II and runs all games on ultra and never goes above 60�c for me
Answer #6
the main thing with making a new pc is having the power, an a motherboard that will be good for a few years, and even more importantly a great cpu, because no matter how good your vidcard might be, your cpu will always hold it back. so buying a not so great video card like a 7870 now is a good idea, because you can save over time and have a cpu/ mobo that will be able to efficiently use a new graphics card! goodluck
Answer #7
8gbs is the standard for gaming computers now
A gaming PC in your price point generally requires a 500-600w PSU, and remember to never cheap out on a PSU.
Some reprutable PSU brands include Antec, Corsair, Seasonic, PC power and cooling. Make sure your PC can fit the GPU you intend to get. A four (maybe six) core AMD processor is preferred. Keep in mind that a good GPU is central to a gaming computer. The GPU should always be the most expensive component. Motherboard depends on whether you plan to overclock, and what features you want.
Answer #8
8gbs is the standard for gaming computers now
A gaming PC in your price point generally requires a 500-600w PSU, and remember to never cheap out on a PSU.
Some reprutable PSU brands include Antec, Corsair, Seasonic, PC power and cooling. Make sure your PC can fit the GPU you intend to get. A four (maybe six) core AMD processor is preferred. Keep in mind that a good GPU is central to a gaming computer. The GPU should always be the most expensive component. Motherboard depends on whether you plan to overclock, and what features you want.

i already have a 600w corsair on my current pc
Answer #9
AMD is garbage, go for Nvidia. Get a GTX 770 or something.
Answer #10
newegg has good deals, I bundled my new pc with everything and it was only 600 dollars. installed the parts my self, and it runs smooth, runs almost every game at Ultra.
Answer #11
$600 buck x.x what kind of spec you got brother O.o
I am building an living room movie/video/surf online mini itx pc. Only picked out like 4 items and I am up to $600 buck x.x I should lower my spec for a entertainment system lol.
Answer #12
newegg has good deals, I bundled my new pc with everything and it was only 600 dollars. installed the parts my self, and it runs smooth, runs almost every game at Ultra.
cheers. I’m going to buy the parts separately so I’m going to start off with the MB+RAM and replace the new board with my old one. I already have an athlon ii CPU which supports AM3+ this will do for the meantime. I’m looking at the ASUS SABERTOOTH 990FX R2.0 board to start with it supports 1866/1600 RAM what would be the better option of the 2? and what RAM manufacture should I opt for?

 

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