I'm in the process of piecing my build together. Its mainly the budget build (1080P) that everyone keeps throwing around on this forum. Now, is that motherboard better or about the same as thisASRock Z87 Extreme4 LGA 1150 Intel Z87 HDMI SATA 6Gbs USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard - Newegg.com? It seems like an excellent deal and would like to start ordering parts as the deals pop up.So after waiting 9 days, my I5-4690k still showed as pre-order on Newegg without charging me. Today I found this combo deal for 4th of july sales.
Newegg.com - Computer Parts, PC Components, Laptop Computers, LED LCD TV, Digital Cameras and more!
Canceled my pre-order, and ordered this, and they charged me right away, and it says Packaging. Guess they had some CPU's afterall? meh saved 80 bucks.
Nah, don't worry about a sound card, on-board sound is perfectly fine for gaming and listening to music.I'm in the process of piecing my build together. Its mainly the budget build (1080P) that everyone keeps throwing around on this forum. Now, is that motherboard better or about the same as thisASRock Z87 Extreme4 LGA 1150 Intel Z87 HDMI SATA 6Gbs USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard - Newegg.com? It seems like an excellent deal and would like to start ordering parts as the deals pop up.
Also, do I need to worry with a sound card if i'm just gaming or just playing music casually? Thanks in advance!
None of those are MMOs or Skyrim or some other sandbox game.The issue of CPU vs GPU came up page or two ago. Here are 66 games tested with a 2500k vs a 4790k, using a Titan. HT was disabled on the 4790k, so 4c/4t vs 4c/4t. CPUs and GPU at stock. 25x16 res.All testing done by an enthusiast, and not a review site. Single GPU only, as multi-GPU setups have been show to be more CPU bound.
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Nor does it show minimum frames or frame latency, but the answer is the same as always when it comes to gaming: buy more GPU over more CPU if you can't afford both.None of those are MMOs or Skyrim or some other sandbox game.
1. Stock cooler are fine if you aren't overlocking(or just overclocking a little bit, like taking a 3.4ghz CPU up to 4ghz). The main advantage of aftermarket coolers is that they will often be quieter, and will help if you are pushing high overclocks (1ghz+ over stock speeds). A lot of stock coolers can be loud as all hell when they really rev up.Questions: 1. Do you think I need to add a cpu cooler or stock is fine? 2. The GPU: Is there any company I should go with or avoid? I noticed MSI, Evga, and Asus all have their own SC editions but I'm not sure if there is a good one to go with. I like the Evga version because its tiny, so I know it will fit. Plus, it uses less power even though its for a little more money.
If anyone has recommendations or input on my build I'd greatly appreciate it. Thanks again
Performance difference between the 840 EVO and the one I posted in my build are minimal.Sorry Quiad, I guess I should of stated that I bought the mobo/cpu in a combo deal already. I saved around $80 so It was more in range with what you suggested. It was a deal Mossybank posted a few posts back. You have a good point about the GPU though. I'll probably go with the 760 SC edition and save some money for a new monitor. I'm still rolling with 1680x1050. I don't think I can justify spending $300+ for a gpu. I just don't game on a computer like I use too and have leaned more towards console gaming. (yes, i left the master race for the peasants!)
Monitor I'll probably getAmazon.com: ASUS VG248QE 24-Inch Screen LED-lit Monitor: Computers AccessoriesSeems like the most popular choice
Lastly, A question.... The reason chose the Samsung Evo SSD was all the praise I've heard/read about them. Would I lose any performance if I went with a cheaper SSD say the Crucial MX100 or Sandisk? Or is it so minute it doesn't justify the price hike? Never have had an SSD before so this is new to me.
Stock cooling is totally fine if you aren't overclocking and you aren't overly worried about noise. They aren't going to shorten the life of your cpu or anything of that sort. That being said you can get a good aftermarket air cooler for under $30 so we aren't talking a ton of money but if you don't need it you don't need it. Put that $25-$30 into upgrading another component that you will notice a difference in.Stock coolers are generally never fine. Don't skimp out on cooling your CPU. Even if you don't get water cooling, you still want an aftermarket heatsink.
Grats. You made an excellent choice IMOJust picked this up:EVGA GeForce GTX 770 Superclocked with ACX Cooler 4 GB
Ya... Blowing hot ass air through your tower isn't going to do much in the way of cooling. Your situation may require something more powerful (liquid).Stock cooling original Haswell hasn't worked out well for me. Then again, it's 82 degrees in here.