High-end gaming PC

Apalche

Reputable
Apr 17, 2014
16
0
4,510
Hey guys! I just wondered if it is something in this build that I should change and replace. I am going to use about 2000 dollars on this system. I also if the cooling is good enough too overclock good so i can play games at really high FPS.

The Build looks like this:
Case: Corsair Obsidian 450d
Motherboard: Asus Maximus VI HERO
GPU: Asus DirectCU II GTX 780
RAM: Corsair Vengeance pro red 2x4gb 2133 mhz
Processor: I5-4670K
CPU Cooler: Corsair h100i
PSU: Antec HCG-620M
Storage: 1TB WD BLUE
Case Fans: Corsair SP's and AF's
 
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/3twXJ This is a much better build, not sure what you did to get that up to $2000. This has a more powerful processor, video card, and PSU. It has the same cooler and case, as both of those are great, the HDD is the same, but I also added a very, very good SSD. It's one of the best out there, and has a good capacity, so you can have more than just your OS on it.

http://pcpartpicker.com/p/3tx3e This is my build with your motherboard.
 

Apalche

Reputable
Apr 17, 2014
16
0
4,510
thx tho! i am going to go with the ssd, and for christmas or birthday im going to run gtx 780 in sli
and then i need to upgrade my psu
 
The 840 Pro is definitely the best SSD for the value. You cannot/ should not run a 780ti with a 780 in SLI. Get the 780ti now. My build is simply the best build you can get for your budget, you can always mix mine with yours, get the 4670k instead of the 4770k, or the 780 instead of the 780ti, but if you do get the 780, do not SLI it with a 780ti.
 

g-unit1111

Titan
Moderator


Actually I'd say the 840 Evo and the Crucial M500 are the best SSDs for the value since they're typically $40 cheaper than the Pro which puts it at a better cost per GB ratio.