prepping for my first pc build in years, what level should I aim for?

maffew6

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Jan 7, 2015
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Hello all,
about me and my situation:
I am dieing for a new gaming rig and finally have the money to get one. I'm probably going to put off getting one till the end of summer so in the mean time I'm trying to learn everything and figure out the absolute best option for me. I have built PCs in the past but its been 8 years so there are a few holes in my knowledge now.
goal- to get the best performance I can without going overboard on price
objectives/concerns-
--to be able to play any current game on high and to have that ability to hold for a decent amount without needing upgrades as I am more likely to replace it in 5 years when I finally snap from not being able to play anything for a year.
--I do not do video editing
--I do basic image editing
--I have a bad habit of multi-tasking (so 16g ram may be overkill but it will make me feel better and is worth the extra $40)
--I want to run these on high: fallout 4, skyrim (with mods), doom, titian fall 2, some others but I'm guessing those will be the heavy hitters
--I intend to get a single 25-27 inch monitor
--I will use a lesser secondary monitor when multitasking (I'll never play a game set to extend over multiple monitors)
budget- looks like ~$1200 is what I have to spend on a tower to be at the peak between good and diminishing returns (best price to preformence as far as I can tell). The next levels of processor jumps $100+ and even a much bigger jump in price for video card.
I'm not linking the exact build as I'm sure it'll change and I'll post again for specifics but that should give you the right idea. Highest i5, average acer mobo, ~$330 nvidia video card, 16G ram, SSD for main (maybe only depending on price, aftermarket heatsink, bland but functional case.

My questions:
will my projected level provide a good enough PC to give me good reason to buy a 2k monitor?
I intend to have a single video card, aka no hyperthreading, is there any reason to go to an i7 rather than an i5 knowing that?
I hope to not overclock and just rely on intel's turboboost, will that do good enough?
How do I calculate what PSU wattage I need accurately, and how much overhead should I factor in?
is it standard practice for CPU or aftermarket heatsinks to have preapplied thermal paste yet?

Would love to hear your opinions and any resources you can suggest for learning more about current requirements and such.
Thanks for any and all input!
 
Solution
G
How's this for a start? I chose the Radeon R9 290 because it's a great deal right now, it can hold you over until pascal or polaris is released. It's not worth getting a Geforce 970 at the moment. You can always add more storage if you like (I don't know how much you need), but the SSD I picked is very fast, it would make a great boot drive. ODD drive was included if you need one. You should use Arctic Silver 5 thermal paste even if your cooler comes with thermal paste. It's simply just the best.


CPU: Intel Core i5-6600K ($244.99 @ Newegg)

Cooling for CPU: Scythe SCKC-3000 Grand Kama Cross 2 CPU Cooler ($41.95 @ Newegg)

Motherboard: ASRock Q170M vPro ($109.99 @ Newegg)

Memory:...
G

Guest

Guest
How's this for a start? I chose the Radeon R9 290 because it's a great deal right now, it can hold you over until pascal or polaris is released. It's not worth getting a Geforce 970 at the moment. You can always add more storage if you like (I don't know how much you need), but the SSD I picked is very fast, it would make a great boot drive. ODD drive was included if you need one. You should use Arctic Silver 5 thermal paste even if your cooler comes with thermal paste. It's simply just the best.


CPU: Intel Core i5-6600K ($244.99 @ Newegg)

Cooling for CPU: Scythe SCKC-3000 Grand Kama Cross 2 CPU Cooler ($41.95 @ Newegg)

Motherboard: ASRock Q170M vPro ($109.99 @ Newegg)

Memory: G.SKILL NS Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) 288-Pin DDR4 SDRAM DDR4 2133 ($53.99 @ Newegg)

Graphics Card: SAPPHIRE Radeon R9 290 DirectX 11.2 100362SR 4GB 512-Bit GDDR5 ($244.99 @ Newegg)

Storage: SAMSUNG 950 PRO M.2 256GB PCI-Express 3.0 x4 Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) ($180.78 @ Newegg)

Optical Disc Drive: PLEXTOR Duplication Grade DVD/CD SATA Burner Drive PX-891SAF - OEM ($29.99 @ Newegg)

Case: SilverStone SST-PS07B MicroATX Mini Tower ($79.99 @ Newegg)

Power Supply: FSP Group Raider S 750 750W 80 PLUS SILVER ($74.99 @ Newegg)

Thermal Paste for CPU: Arctic Silver 5 High-Density Polysynthetic Silver Thermal Compound AS5-3.5G - OEM ($6.99 @ Newegg)

Total: $1,068.65

Prices do not include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
 
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maffew6

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Jan 7, 2015
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thanks for your suggestion on the thermal paste.
As for the build I think the only notable changes I had was an asus mobo as they are much more user friendly and a invidia video card because invidia usually tries to give specific support to more games but its worthwhile-ness is up for debate.
 
G

Guest

Guest
No problem. I just wouldn't want to suggest picking up a new 970 at the moment. The Geforce 1070 will crush the 970 when it comes out, so I would pick up a used one (no more than $240) or just go with the cheaper R9 290 since that and the 970 are more or less equal.
 

maffew6

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Jan 7, 2015
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yeah very curious if the 1070 will be worth getting right away or if I can pick up an older card for super cheap or if ill just be better off waiting a few more months for it to smooth out