Is amd a4 4000 cpu with hd 7770 good?

Arpit Maratha

Reputable
Sep 12, 2014
6
0
4,510
Hey guys......is amd a4 4000 cpu with amd hd 7770 ghz edition(with 4 gb ram) good for playing games like battlefield 4 and titanfall?
Or i have to upgrade something? Med-low will also be great for me!
Any suggestions? Thnx.....
 

exroofer

Distinguished
Those games will "run" with those parts, but not at higher resolutions or settings.
64 player BF4 will probably lag pretty hard.

Is it a prebuilt coming with a APU? FX6300 plus R270x would be much higher performance, but cost more. Not huge amounts more though.
That is a pretty low end apu as well.

The games you ask about are fairly demanding, especially on higher settings.
 
Actually, that's a high mid level card, which isn't too terrible. You might even be able to use it with the integrated graphics in dual graphics asymmetric crossfire to increase performance. There are sometimes micro stuttering issues and I'm not positive that apu is capable but it's worth checking into.
 

Arpit Maratha

Reputable
Sep 12, 2014
6
0
4,510

so i should change my cpu? or gpu? plz help
 

exroofer

Distinguished
We need to know what kind of budget, and if you are building it yourself or buying it pre built,
Also whether you need everything, or already have mouse, keyboard, monitor etc.
Will you need an OS?
All these things affect final price.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/pc-system-build-value-compared,3859.html

Link to Tom's system builder marathon showing parts and benchmarks at various price points. To give you an idea.
 

exroofer

Distinguished
Well that's the the thing. The Op hasn't been specific as to whether that is what he already owns, or is thinking of buying pre built, or thinking of building. As a budget gamer it would work fine. If he has not yet bought anything, there may be more value for dollar to be had.

If he already owns the system, then he should install the game and see what happens.......:)
 


Agreed. He also needs to specify the entire system component build because more often than not they pair things extremely lopsided or forget priority of the PSU entirely. Knowing what he already has, if anything, and what he doesn't, if everything, makes the entire process simpler.