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BZRKT

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Mar 25, 2017
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So i'm going to be investing about £750 into a new gaming pc (desktop) if anyone could link me some good websites it would be appreciated ty :D
 

SrKlompenstein

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Oct 21, 2015
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I have made my gamecomputer on this website: https://gamecomputers.nl/
I know it is Dutch, but maybe it can help you :)

I have experience with gamecomputers. You actually want the best, but it is immediately more expensive than your budget.
I just have one question: which games do you want to play on your gamecomputer? If you only go play Minecraft and other lower games, I recommend you to take a gamecomputer with a lower price and cheaper specifications.
But if you want to play higher games, like ARK Survival Evolved, Titanfall and Rust, you really need higher specifications and then you are quickly over £750.

Good luck!
 

BZRKT

Member
Mar 25, 2017
22
5
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United Kingdom
For £750 I buy my graphic cards
damn son
I have made my gamecomputer on this website: https://gamecomputers.nl/
I know it is Dutch, but maybe it can help you :)

I have experience with gamecomputers. You actually want the best, but it is immediately more expensive than your budget.
I just have one question: which games do you want to play on your gamecomputer? If you only go play Minecraft and other lower games, I recommend you to take a gamecomputer with a lower price and cheaper specifications.
But if you want to play higher games, like ARK Survival Evolved, Titanfall and Rust, you really need higher specifications and then you are quickly over £750.

Good luck!
ahh I see thanks for the input I'll check it out :)
 
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Story

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Jan 30, 2014
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letterboxd.com
I have made my gamecomputer on this website: https://gamecomputers.nl/
I know it is Dutch, but maybe it can help you :)

I have experience with gamecomputers. You actually want the best, but it is immediately more expensive than your budget.
I just have one question: which games do you want to play on your gamecomputer? If you only go play Minecraft and other lower games, I recommend you to take a gamecomputer with a lower price and cheaper specifications.
But if you want to play higher games, like ARK Survival Evolved, Titanfall and Rust, you really need higher specifications and then you are quickly over £750.

Good luck!
You don't need more than a £750 investment to play Titanfall and Rust, far less. PC Gaming is way cheaper than it's made out to be, if you build your pc yourself you can build a PC that runs better than consoles for cheaper than they're sold.

Source (http://reddit.com/r/pcmasterrace)
 
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Chimpeeze

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Aug 27, 2016
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This website is great for building your own. I built mines three years ago for less than 400 and I can play any games, even new ones at a decent fps
https://uk.pcpartpicker.com/

Basically you pick the parts, it checks the compatibility of the components together and it gives you the best price from several websites for each part.
But always do some searching for parts yourself :P
 

SrKlompenstein

Forum Expert
Oct 21, 2015
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You don't need more than a £750 investment to play Titanfall and Rust, far less. PC Gaming is way cheaper than it's made out to be, if you build your pc yourself you can build a PC that runs better than consoles for cheaper than they're sold.

Source (http://reddit.com/r/pcmasterrace)
You are partially right; it differs per site or company.
When you buy loose parts, they are often cheaper.

And... I also do not know everything about a well-constructed gamecomputer :P
I can also learn from the other people, like you, so thank you! :)
 

Story

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Jan 30, 2014
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letterboxd.com
You are partially right; it differs per site or company.
When you buy loose parts, they are often cheaper.

And... I also do not know everything about a well-constructed gamecomputer :p
I can also learn from the other people, like you, so thank you! :)
Loose parts? no, parts. Prebuilt computers aren't the norm, they're called prebuilds because they're built for you. They are always overpriced. If you get the parts and build it yourself then you have built a computer for the price that they should be, you didn't get it for cheaper, you got it for the norm and if you buy a prebuild then you've overpaid.
 

Darkform9

Well-Known Member
May 6, 2016
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£750 is a lot of money to be putting money towards a GPU. However you could easily get a very high quality graphics card. I would recommend getting an nvidia gtx 1070 6Gb, it is not incredibly expensive and while you could go to a gtx 1080; I think getting a gtx 1070 would be more than enough, you could put the rest of the amount into a different section such as CPU or RAM (possibly getting 16Gb DDR4 @2133MHz). This would ensure the pc would run very fast no matter what you were working on. An SSD would also be a good investment.
 

Leeberator

Well-Known Member
Apr 20, 2016
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Here's a good £750 build. Let me know if you need peripherals included in the budget, and I'll adjust the list.

PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant

CPU: Intel Core i5-7400 3.0GHz Quad-Core Processor (£159.97 @ Amazon UK)
Motherboard: Asus H110M-K Micro ATX LGA1151 Motherboard (£47.99 @ Amazon UK)
Memory: *Crucial 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-2133 Memory (£83.99 @ Amazon UK)
Storage: Sandisk SSD PLUS 240GB 2.5" Solid State Drive (£74.80 @ Alza)
Storage: Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive (£41.80 @ Amazon UK)
Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 1060 6GB 6GB GAMING Video Card (£239.98 @ Amazon UK)
Case: Corsair Carbide SPEC-M2 MicroATX Mid Tower Case (£47.80 @ Alza)
Power Supply: EVGA 500W 80+ Bronze Certified ATX Power Supply (£58.95 @ Amazon UK)
Total: £755.28
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
*Lowest price parts chosen from parametric criteria
Generated by PCPartPicker 2017-04-07 19:39 BST+0100
 

accurates

Well-Known Member
May 28, 2016
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Here's a good £750 build. Let me know if you need peripherals included in the budget, and I'll adjust the list.

PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant

CPU: Intel Core i5-7400 3.0GHz Quad-Core Processor (£159.97 @ Amazon UK)
Motherboard: Asus H110M-K Micro ATX LGA1151 Motherboard (£47.99 @ Amazon UK)
Memory: *Crucial 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-2133 Memory (£83.99 @ Amazon UK)
Storage: Sandisk SSD PLUS 240GB 2.5" Solid State Drive (£74.80 @ Alza)
Storage: Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive (£41.80 @ Amazon UK)
Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 1060 6GB 6GB GAMING Video Card (£239.98 @ Amazon UK)
Case: Corsair Carbide SPEC-M2 MicroATX Mid Tower Case (£47.80 @ Alza)
Power Supply: EVGA 500W 80+ Bronze Certified ATX Power Supply (£58.95 @ Amazon UK)
Total: £755.28
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
*Lowest price parts chosen from parametric criteria
Generated by PCPartPicker 2017-04-07 19:39 BST+0100
Try a i5 7500 less bottleneck and get a 3gb 1060 this will be less of a bottleneck. The 7400 bottlenecks a lot actually :)
 

Leeberator

Well-Known Member
Apr 20, 2016
127
15
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27
Try a i5 7500 less bottleneck and get a 3gb 1060 this will be less of a bottleneck. The 7400 bottlenecks a lot actually :)
An extra 400MHz (300MHz on max Turbo) won't make a big difference in performance. Dropping to the 3GB 1060, however, will make a significant difference.

That being said, now that Ryzen 5 is out, here is my revised parts list:

PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant

CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 1500X 3.5GHz Quad-Core Processor (£179.99 @ Amazon UK)
Motherboard: ASRock AB350M Micro ATX AM4 Motherboard (£67.90 @ CCL Computers)
Memory: *Crucial 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-2133 Memory (£83.99 @ Amazon UK)
Storage: Sandisk SSD PLUS 240GB 2.5" Solid State Drive (£75.80 @ Alza)
Storage: Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive (£41.95 @ Amazon UK)
Video Card: *EVGA GeForce GTX 1060 6GB 6GB SC GAMING Video Card (£214.98 @ Amazon UK)
Case: Corsair Carbide SPEC-M2 MicroATX Mid Tower Case (£47.80 @ Alza)
Power Supply: EVGA 500W 80+ Certified ATX Power Supply (£37.93 @ CCL Computers)
Total: £750.34
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
*Lowest price parts chosen from parametric criteria
Generated by PCPartPicker 2017-04-23 00:27 BST+0100

The belief that Ryzen benefits from faster memory is only partially true. It does get a performance bump with faster memory, but the performance scales about as well as it does on recent Intel chips.
 
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