I am a big gamer and I plan on building a new computer very soon. I am somewhat familiar with the workings of a PC and I hope to build this one myself. Unfortunately, I know very little about how certain boards interact with different card and such, so I would rather get a few expert opinions on a from-scratch build.
Things I have:
Mouse
Headset
Things I need:
Everything else
I know a smattering about graphics cards and CPU's, but motherboards are beyond me.
I am a big MMO and RTS nerd, but I want to be able to run any game that comes out in the near future at a reasonable graphics setting.
My budget can range up to $1400 or so (including a monitor), but cheaper is always better, and I am open to any and all suggestions.
Hi sailorjim .. this build would be top notch for under $1400 budget...
CPU: Intel E8400: $190
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-EP35-DS3L : $85
RAM: 2GB DDR2 800 Corsair/Gskill/ : $30
GPU: 8800GTS 512mb: $180 / Radeon 4870: ~$350
Hard Drive: 500GB Seagate 7200.11 : $85
Monitor: Acer AL2216Wbd Black 22" : $220
PSU: Corsair 550vx : $65
Total: $ 1025 if you get 8800GTS GPU... / or $1200 if you get the Radeon 4870.
These are the explanations as to why i recommend that build:
Regarding the CPU, its the most popular gaming CPU out there.
The mobo is the very best non SLI mobo in the market ... don't bother with SLI since its expensive and not quite worth it. Stick with a fast single GPU.
Which brings us to GPU.... you really should wait for the new Radeon 4870 and Nvidia GTX260 ... both cards release in a few days time .....
That hard drive is the fastest 500GB HD out there.
Those RAM brands are one of the best ... more quality brands include Mushkin, Kingston, OCZ etc . Though you would need 4GB of RAM if you're running Vista... else stick with 2GB.
That 22" Acer monitor is swell and that 550W PSU is high quality. You're good to go. You could still bring down you budget by $70 or so with a high quality 19" monitor ..its your call.
Message edited by mihirkula on 06-12-2008 at 07:07:53 PM
I'm assuming you;'re in the USA. In that case you should try www.newegg.com first, and maybe look for better deals at tigerdirect and www.ncixus.com and www.buy.com.
OK, let's start with this list. Prices are Newegg, but very approximate because I'm too lazy to check, sorry. I need to eat so I'm in a hurry here.
You probably could skimp on the case/keyboard and get a better graphics card, but that 8800GT will do what you seem to be asking for pretty well.
If you want to overclock, then i would suggest getting an Asus P5E ( http://www.newegg.com/Product/Prod [...] 6813131219 ). Also, then if you decided to go ATI, you could do crossfire, (although i wouldn't reccomend it).
~50 USD more will get you an 8800 GTS 512mb (G92) so that might be a good idea, but its your choice.
Also keep in mind these prices are all from newegg, im sure there are lower prices elsewhere, so look around.
Also on a side note, how do you have a mouse and headset, but no keyboard/parts of an old computer?
Intel Core 2 Duo E8400/Core 2 Quad Q6600 (depends on whether or not you multitask. I LOVE my Q6600 for this: I can run Oblivion, a Source-based game, and several web pages and get no noticeable slowdown whatsoever. An E8400 will beat it for straight gaming, though)
Xigmatek HDT-S1283 CPU cooler
Gigabyte GA-EP35-DS3L motherboard
2 x 2 GB kit G. Skill DDR2-800
EVGA GeForce 8800 GTS (G92) (you can Step-Up using EVGA's program to a GT2xx when they come out)
Cooler Master RC-690 case
Corsair 550 VX/650 TX power supply
Seagate 7200.11/WD6400AAKS hard drive (I prefer Seagate myself (5 year warranty, 32mb cache), but some swear by WD's 640 gig drives)
Monitor is up to you.
This build will allow maxed settings on everything but Crysis right now (and it will play that at excellent settings (high/very high) anyway). If you upgrade to a GT2xx, I can't see you having any problems for a couple of years.
Judging from prices on newegg, you should end up spending about $950 without monitor.
Newegg right now sells the 550VX with a $10.25 shipping charge, for a total of $100.24 after rebate and shipping. The 650TX is $99.99 after rebate with free shipping. You really need to include shipping costs too to compare properly. Between these two excellent PSUs I'd get the 650TX if the prices differ by 25 cents.
Between 8800GT and 8800GTS 512MB: the GTS is about 14% faster and has a better cooler. If you get a GT at least pick one with a dual-slot cooler.
The only difference in those builds is the CPU, video cards and the PSU. The first one has a E7200, factory overclocked 8800GT 512 and a 500w OCZ psu, and the second build has a E8400, factory overclocked 8800GTS 512 (G92) and a 600w OCZ psu.
Those builds have decent cooling for a mild OC (3x120mm fans/side air duct/aluminum) and no crappy plastic side window. It's easy enough to swap out the harddrive for a larger one if you so choose on those builds. If your going to overclock to the max, you can always change that heatsink/fan to a Xigmatek s1283 and change the case to a Coolermaster 590 or 690.
Message edited by Why_Me on 06-13-2008 at 01:40:06 AM
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