How will this pc perform?

MrPosideoNJ

Commendable
Sep 13, 2016
4
0
1,510
How will this pc perform with video editing & running games such as Gta 5 & battlefield and how good is it for all around pc. I'm not sure of the motherboard that comes with it..

Core i5-6600K Quad-Core
8GB of DDR4 RAM
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060
120GB SSD + 2TB HDD
SuperMulti DVD Burner
1 x 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet Port
USB 2.0, USB 3.0, DVI, HDMI, DisplayPort
USB Wired Keyboard & Mouse Included
Windows 10 Home (64-bit)
 
Solution
Why can you "only get it pre built"? There's no benefit to doing so. Doing any upgrades yourself will void any warranty provided by the assembler anyway (and paying 50$ extra for them to do is just not worth it). Also, motherboard isn't really an issue, and power supply quality is not determined by wattage.
Good, but since you're "not sure of the motherboard" something tells me it's a prebuilt. In that case the motherboard is the least of your concerns. I heavily advise you to build your own instead, as prebuilts tend to cheap out on not only the motherboard but the power supply (which doesn't reduce the price because the assembler puts their fee in the price). Cheaping out on the power supply a scummy tactic as it puts the user's machine at a risk that the buyer is not aware of, and (by majority) ensures that something will go wrong just outside the warranty period of the whole machine but within that of the components, so the assembler gets free money for basically RMAing broken components (or if it happens even later gets to sell you a replacement).

Building your own PC is practically as easy as assembling IKEA furniture (extra screws included :D), so I wouldn't be afraid of it.
 

MrPosideoNJ

Commendable
Sep 13, 2016
4
0
1,510
My dilemma is that I'm financing a pc and can only get it pre built so if I upgraded the motherboard and powersupply to 800 watts and then a good motherboard what is your opinion of the build, performance and fps wise.
 
Why can you "only get it pre built"? There's no benefit to doing so. Doing any upgrades yourself will void any warranty provided by the assembler anyway (and paying 50$ extra for them to do is just not worth it). Also, motherboard isn't really an issue, and power supply quality is not determined by wattage.
 
Solution