Im attempting to build my first gaming computer and have all the parts picked out but am wondering if theres anything better or different i should use/get. my budget is around 600$ including shipping in that cost i already have a monitor and am just looking to play CoD4, Crysis, Counterstrike and an assortment of LAN party games.
I'm also a little concerned about your hard drive choice. If you read the reviews a number had faulty drives, and there isn't any warranty info on the newegg page. Look at either http://www.newegg.com/Product/Prod [...] 6822136073 which is a WD drive with a 3 year warranty or http://www.newegg.com/Product/Prod [...] 6822148288 a seagate drive with costs $5 more, but comes with twice the cache and a 5 year warranty. I know you're trying to keep costs down, but you really can't skimp on hard drive quality.
@Jbergeron: No thats a pretty bad motherboard. For one it has an outdated chipset. Two, it has integrated graphics which is entirely pointless if you're getting an 8800gt.
Unless you actually expect to use all 500gigs, get 50bmg's hard drive and use the left over money on the mobo i recommended.
Rosewill has a rly bad reputation...and if that goes it could take something else with it
Id also suggest doing more research b4 u do this....make sure u kno what ur buying and understand how the computer works b4 u build one. I researched for months b4 i built my first one
Message edited by Silverion77 on 08-26-2008 at 10:37:15 PM
------------------------------Antec 1200|Antec Signature 850w|Asus Maximus II Formula|Q9650|4GB Dominator 1066|EVGA 9800GX2
Reply to Silverion77
DS3L is perfect for a budget build. My DS3R runs very nicely. Just be aware that to access the enhanced bios options you need to press Ctrl + F1 from the main bios screen.
You have what is effectively a pentium based processor there. A little extra cash will go a long way to a faster system in that department. Currently you are only spending $35 more on the processor (the most important component) than the HDD.
An extra $100 will see you with one of the best value/performance dual core processors around at the moment, E8500. There are obviously options in the middle ground as well. The E2220 is just not going to cut it for gaming - maybe a little more saving?
The other option is to take the 2220 and overclock it. But it may not last for more than a year or two. At that point you will also need a decent heat sink.
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