Is my Pc good?

Tobisuff

Prominent
Jun 16, 2017
6
0
510
So after hours upon hours of studying every part that a pc contains (not EVERY part) as i didnt know anything i now feel as i can understand pc's, altough i do have a lot to learn still.

I manged to build what i see as my perfect pc and i wanted to know (i know its a good pc) if is there anything you would change or add.

I know you understand a lot more than i do so if you can throw some advise or two, ill be glad

https://pcpartpicker.com/list/WH9PTH

Thank you!
 
Solution
The power supply is not the greatest, the G1 units like NEX never reviewed very well. I would look at the evga G2 or G3 650 or 550watt.

For a gaming PC I would stick with the 7700k, the ryzen 1700 certainly has its merits and intels latest business practices certainly leave a lot to be desired. But the 7700k is superior to the the R7 1700 in gaming, and in my opinion it will likely remain that way for the foreseeable future.

Kurtisdede

Commendable
Jun 10, 2017
72
11
1,565
I would change the cpu to a ryzen 7 1700(x) for my needs, but if you are JUST gaming then stick with the i7-7700k. but with the ryzen you also get future proofing and 8 cores, versus 4 on the i7.
The i7 is a bit better than the ryzen in gaming, but ryzen crushes it in other tasks, like streaming, video editing, etc.
Also the temps of the i7 are very high, and Intel recommends you don't overclock it. But with the liquid CPU cooler I assume you'll be fine.
I may sound like an AMD fan, but that's because I am - But I'm still being honest. IMO intel's only good thing (right now)is the G4560
 

Tobisuff

Prominent
Jun 16, 2017
6
0
510
Tbh i havent checked AMD but what ur saying is tempting so im going to look into that cpu as i am interested in streaming. Would changing that cpu affect any of my components? I7 7700k's heat is kind of worrying me a little bit.
 

Dunlop0078

Titan
Ambassador
The power supply is not the greatest, the G1 units like NEX never reviewed very well. I would look at the evga G2 or G3 650 or 550watt.

For a gaming PC I would stick with the 7700k, the ryzen 1700 certainly has its merits and intels latest business practices certainly leave a lot to be desired. But the 7700k is superior to the the R7 1700 in gaming, and in my opinion it will likely remain that way for the foreseeable future.
 
Solution