$500 Gaming PC: Day 1, Component Selection

Graphics Card and Hard Drive

Graphics: XFX 8800GS

Based on the same NVidia G92 graphics processor as the popular 8800GT and 8800GTS, the 384MB 8800GS easily takes on the 512MB Radeon HD3850, while costing less. In fact, our chosen 8800GS model’s $130 base price is currently accompanied by a $30 mail-in rebate, for a final cost of $100.

XFX 8800GS

Justifying the lower price of the 8800GS is its reduced 192-bit memory pathway and 92 shader units, compared to 256-bits and 112 shaders for the 8800GT. Compared to later GeForce graphics cards, it falls only slightly behind the more expensive 9600GT in performance.

Because we couldn’t wait around for mail-in-rebates, we didn’t even consider the $30 rebate in our price list. On the other hand, that rebate makes this 8800GS a far superior value compared to the closest-priced Radeon HD3850.

Hard Drive: Seagate Baracuda 7200.10 250 GB

After doing some price comparisons, we found 250 GB to be the “sweet spot” for capacity among “low-cost” drives. The Barracuda 7200.10 250 GB provides good performance at a minimal $8 increase over 120 GB versions.

Seagate Barracuda 7200

While 250 GB seems small to most of us, some builders would claim that even this much capacity isn’t needed for a “pure gaming” PC. We feel that a “gaming” PC should at least be able to handle a user’s other basic needs, which justifies the extra few dollars spent for added capacity.

  • romulus47plus1
    Somehow I think this is a better PC than the 1000$ one.
    Reply
  • lunyone
    Is it me or was their first price list have the Phenom 9500 and when I looked at the next page they were mentioning the e2160 w/DS3L? I'd much prefer this setup over the $1k that they listed last month. I mean, I could build a $1k rig that would compete with their $1.5k or better system.
    Reply
  • Coolio_alert
    Looks cool, still better then my 3 year old $300 one but that will be changing by the summer: Armor Case, Antec 650w, Maximus Formula, E8400, BFG 8800GTS OC, 2 GB Dominator RAM, 500gb 7200.11 (Seagate Barracuda), 2 Lightscribes. Gonna run XP Home (32-bit) and no overclocking for a little bit until its needed or I feel more confident. I CAN'T WAIT!!! :D
    Reply
  • radguy
    I asked for another 500 dollar build after the last sbm. This overclocked might throw up some really interesting results. Just make sure we have some real gaming benchmarks this time please. Also I really like what you guys picked.
    Reply
  • zenmaster
    Excellent Shopping.
    Truly Impressive build.

    Gotta love those falling GPU prices.
    Reply
  • TechnologyCoordinator
    I like the article, but I'm consused by the price list on the first page, what does it reference!?!? I'd love to see the price list of the $500 build on the first page.
    Reply
  • Eric Tardes
    Nice roundup.
    Very nice configuration for 500 bucks.

    Curious about the review,and overclocking results :).

    The price on the first page is from previous "System builder marathon - Low cost system", so don't worry about the first page, it's there just for the reference!
    Reply
  • MisterChef
    a few swore by “Absurdly Cheap” components that our experience has proven are likely to fail within the first few months of use

    Yeah, I was one of those "absurdly cheap" bastards. :) But this $500 build has indeed got my interest. I eagarly await testing results.
    Reply
  • woodstock827
    there seems to be come inconsistencies in the component list on first page and the rest of the article.. the obvious ones are the CPU (AMD vs Intel?) and the Graphics card (AMD vs nVidia). It'd be great if that's fixed. ;)
    Reply
  • woodstock827
    o.. wait.. nvm.. I got confused.. the front page is for the low-cost system a month back? a bit confusing there..
    Reply