How to Build a Kick-Ass Gaming Rig for Under $700
Build A Gaming Machine That Will Satisfy Your Cravings Without Breaking the Bank
The thought of a gaming PC might conjure up images of decadent excess—a full-course meal of awesome that moves from an SSD consumé to a filet of Core i7 990X to quad-SLI under glass. While that’s certainly a feast worth aspiring to, it’s by no means the only fare that will give your gaming needs sustenance.

And, no, we’re not suggesting that you ruin your health with an empty-calorie diet of console. In fact, unlike some corners of the gaming world, where there’s a fixed menu of parts, the PC offers loads of options that scale from opulent to economical.
Our budget gaming rig is all about instant gratification: a way for you to fill your gaming hunger with a state of the art, speedy machine, capable of playing today’s games at 1080p resolutions, for less than $700. With our instructions, you will see how you can build it yourself in less than hour. On top of that, we’ll tell you how you can easily supersize your budget box with future upgrades.
Is your mouth watering? Let’s dig in!
On The Menu: The Ingredients That Make Up Our $667 PC
GPU: SAPPHIRE RADEON HD 6790 - $150

The selection of budget videocard these days is an embarrassment of riches. We’ve never seen such an assortment of truly powerful, low-cost cards. We decided on AMD’s Radeon HD 6790, which is capable of 1080p gaming in such games as Crysis 2, Battlefield 2: Bad Company, and a ton of other premium titles. Is it a Radeon HD 6990 or GeForce GTX 590? No, our entire system was built for less than the price of AMD’s or Nvidia’s latest dual GPUs.
www.sapphiretech.com
CPU: Intel Core i3-2100 - $126

Intel’s Sandy Bridge chips are truly wondrous for being fast as hell and cheaper than, well, what Intel could charge. For example, the 3.1GHz Core i3-2100 dual-core is actually faster in most of the benchmarks—even those that are multithreaded—than the similarly priced Athlon II X4 quad-core, and even surpasses the Phenom II X4 965 Black Edition in many of our tests. Not bad for a $126 chip.
www.intel.com
MOTHERBOARD: GIGABYTE GA-H67M-D2-B3 - $90

We had to make tough choices to come in under budget and the Gigabyte board was one of them. That’s not to say that it’s a bad board, but there were some features that had to be sacrificed. First up, it’s microATX, which limits future expansion possibilities. That doesn’t hurt as much as the two DIMM slots, though. Ouch. If we had the extra cash, we would have ponied up an extra $30 to get a standard ATX board with four DIMM slots.
www.gigabyte.com
OPTICAL DRIVE: SAMSUNG SH-S223A - $22

A tech media prediction says that optical drives will go away within five years. Sure, maybe if you don’t actually use a freaking computer for anything. Our budget doesn’t allow for Blu-ray, so Samsung’s trusty old 22x DVD burner gets put to work yet again.
www.samsung.com
PSU: ROSEWILL RG530-S12 - $50

When push comes to shove, the PSU budget goes overboard first. That doesn’t mean the Rosewill RG530-S12 is junk. Far from it, in fact. The PSU features two 6-pin GPU plugs and didn’t hiccup once during our testing. It helps that the Rosewill PSU (the house brand for Newegg) was on instant rebate for $25. So, in many ways, it’s actually a $75 PSU that we got for $50.
www.newegg.com
RAM: Patriot 4GB DDR3/1333 - $40

With the Patriot sticker on it, you know there’s good support behind it. That’s more than we can say for no-name generic RAM.
www.patriotmemory.com
CASE: ROSEWILL R218 - $30

Believe it or not, we spent one-third more on this year’s case than last year’s. That’s because Rosewill doesn’t sell the $20 black metal case we used in last year’s budget rig. But $30 for an enclosure is still pretty inexpensive, and the Rosewill R218 does the job.
www.newegg.com
HARD DRIVE: WESTERN DIGITAL CAVAIR BLUE 1TB - $60

With a $10 instant rebate, we snagged a massive 1TB of storage for $60. You can’t really argue with that.
www.westerndigital.com
OS: OEM WINDOWS 7 HOME PREMIUM - $99

Is there any other choice?
www.microsoft.com
Today's Parts List Specials
| GPU | Sapphire Radeon HD 6790 | $150 |
| CPU | Intel Core i3-2100 | $126 |
| DVD | Samsung SH-S223A | $22 |
| MB | Gigabyte GA-H67M-D2-B3 | $90 |
| PSU | Rosewill RG530-S12 | $50 |
| RAM | Patriot 4GB DDR3/1333 | $40 |
| CASE | Rosewill R218 | $30 |
| HDD | Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB | $60 |
| OS | OEM Windows 7 Home Premium | $99 |
| TOTAL COST | $667 |
Comments
Comments are closed on this article
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fiachamp
February 28, 2012 at 2:43am
I just built a sub-$1000 gaming rig that drastically exceeds the specs of this machine and ought to be up-to-date for 1.5-2 years. Runs battlefield 3 in ultra settings at >60fps.
Check it out at www.rightrig.tumblr.com
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Silencer
March 15, 2012 at 4:53am
This is a relatively old article.
Didn't see any Optical Drive listed, like in your sub-$1600 build.
No OS listed, like in this article.
Nobody lists Keyboard, Mouse, Mouse Pad, Surge Strip, Monitor, Speakers.120 GB is really small storage for a gaming rig, even a budget one.
I hate nVidia cards. I also prefer brands other than XFX, OCZ and G.SKILL, although G.SKILL is OK. I hate rebates, but not your fault.
Good luck, I've seen worse. Add pictures.
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Silencer
March 15, 2012 at 4:54am
http://www.maximumpc.com/awordfromoursponsors?destination=hell
:o)
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nr7
October 29, 2011 at 4:26pm
I built a pc myself for about $750 the other day and these are my specs. No matter what I do, it won't boot into POST or BIOS! No beep codes. And Suddenly the other day, my graphics card fan stopped spinning and I dont know why! HELP! Maybe my parts are incompatible?! Tell ME! PLEASE! I have done everything! Removed from case, reinserted RAM, CPU and Graphics Card, tried different monitors, cables and even called Tech Support! Nothing seems to be working! HELP!!!!!!!!!
MSI H67MA-E35 MotherboardIntel Core i5 2500k CPU4GB DDR3 RAMGigabyte GV-R685D5-1GD/GV-R685OC-1GD (AMD Radeon 6850 Graphics)Cooler Master 550 Watt Power SupplySeagate 1TB Hard DriveAsus DVD/CD Burner
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Silencer
October 30, 2011 at 2:19am
You probably made an error during assembly, if this is your first time. Sounds like a short. Make sure there isn't a loose screw under the motherboard. Make sure your motherboard screws aren't too fat. Did you use motherboard standoffs? If so, try another Power Supply (make sure you also connected the 4-pin connector to the motherboard.) Make sure if video needs power, it's plugged in. Could be bad/damaged board, improperly inserted CPU or RAM or cards. Fully re-assemble slowly and carefully, with minimum components (i.e. leave out some RAM, cards,) testing as you add and swap, and let me know if none of this fixes, and i'll give you more ideas. Could be a broken MB. Else, if not connections/short, probably Power Supply. Hope you can swap to test. Re-building and swapping is usually the quickest way to iron it out. I recently built-up 4 PCs, had 5 components fail, and 5 incompatabilities, all ironed-out. All 4 rock-solid tanks now! :O)
Also, I'd suggest reviewing the article for ideas on what you might've missed.
You probably need one of these:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817339009
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817339012
...If you need a cord.
Edit: Just noticed your SLI! LOL! Ya, that's your problem. You'll need a bigger power supply. Get at least 800 real or 1000 fake watts. I like the above brand, check my PS, even though it's 580, it'd handle your stuff, cause it's REAL!
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817339006
I'd still get bigger though, 700+ from that brand, would work.
Oh, and your Crossfire/SLI still might not work. Crossfire/SLI isn't exactly what I'd call "Plug 'n Play", like in the Voodoo days. SLI'ing OC's is harder too, if not impossible! LOL! Compatability is a concern now, after all! GL! REALLY! I'd definitely start with *ONE* video card!
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sopoforic_lotus
October 14, 2011 at 11:45am
Does anyone have a prediction of how many years this rig would be able to play new games on their lowest settings? I plan to upgrade the motherboard as suggested. I have been out of PC gaming for years so I have no idea myself.
Thanks
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RicCrouch
December 02, 2011 at 9:12pm
My last rig was about the same level of "bleeding-edge-ness" and it has lasted about 8 years... 7-8 years is a good estimate if you don't mind REALLY low performance on the games near the end of that window.
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Silencer
October 15, 2011 at 10:30am
Ballpark: 7 years. (Other 'thoughtful' opinions are also welcome...)
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Aphelion
September 20, 2011 at 1:56pm
My gaming rig beats yours:
Core i5-2500
8GB DDR3-1600 RAM
HD 6850The general specifications speak for themselves.
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Silencer
October 15, 2011 at 2:09pm
I've upgraded, since my last 'personal specs' post, on this article. Check it:
=-=-=-= Upgrades: [With Prices, Original, and Now: (10/15/11)]
8/24/11 279.99 279.99 CPU: Intel Core i7 2600K LGA 1155 Boxed Processor
- It's my understanding, that this is currently the *best*, 'consumer CPU'? ?8/24/11 79.99 54.99 RAM: Corsair XMS3 8GB DDR3-1600 (PC3-12800) CL9 2x4GB
- Newegg only had 1333. MicroCenter, sold me this, instead. :O)8/24/11 209.99 199.99 VID: Gigabyte GV-R687OC-1GD AMD Radeon HD 6870 1024MB GDDR5 PCIe 2.1 x16
- Notice the 'OC' in the model number. Heh heh heh. Gigabyte, can do that.8/24/11 149.99 169.99 MBD: ASUS P8P67 PRO R3.1 LGA 1155 P67 ATX Intel
- My favorite part, is the "Magic Overclock Button". (TPU.) LOVE IT! :O)And with a combo CPU/MB discount, even with sales taxes, (and also, even *without*, the rebates that they also gave me to mail in,) I saved money *over Newegg*. I was shocked! AND, I CAN HAVE IT NOW, (45 mins.,) TOO!?!? Coolness! You feel me? Ya: MicroCenter. Plus, the dude that helped me (Patrick?) was really cool too. He was knowledgeable and helpful, etc. You know.
=-=-=-= Remainder (of my Main System:) [With Prices, Original, and: (6/20/11)]
1/9/11 423.99 439.99 HD1: Mushkin Callisto Deluxe 240GB SATA II MLC SSD
12/1/10 99.99 97.99 OPT: LG Black 10X BD-R SATA Super Multi WH10LS30
1/2/08 39.99 54.99 CSE: Cooler Master Centurion 534, Black, 2 Fans
1/2/08 64.99 69.99 PSU: Compucase hec ACE580W SLI/Crossfire
? 69.95 N/A KEY: Saitek Eclipse KU-0418 Blue USB
1/2/08 16.99 N/A MSE: Logitech Wheel 800dpi USB/PS/2
6/8/11 259.99 269.99 MON: Hanns-G HZ281HPB 28" 1080p HDMI LCD=-=-=-= I also got this, to throw my old guts into, (for a secondary/guest computer):
8/24/11 59.99 57.99 CSE: Cooler Master Elite 310 Blue ATX Computer Case with 420 Watt Power Supply
- I do like two of Newegg's Rosewill cases. (Of course, not available at MicroCenter.)[Old Guts:] [My CPU's my weak spot. But it works well enough for me, for now.] [With Prices, Original, and: (6/20/11)]
1/2/08 119.99 N/A MBD: Asus M2R32-MVP
1/2/08 119.99 39.99 CPU: AMD Athlon 64 X2 5200+ 2.6GHz Dual-Core
1/5/11 72.99 59.99 RAM: Kingston 4GB DDR2 800 (PC2-6400) CL5
9/7/08 169.99 N/A VID: Sapphire ATI Radeon HD 4850 1GB
1/2/08 129.99 112.00 HD2: Western Digital RE2 500GB 7200 16MB SATA
1/2/08 18.99 N/A FLP: Mitsumi with Card Reader FA404M Black=-=-=-= For storage, I have Externals: 8GB MP3, 160GB, 1TB and 2TB. My new 2TB: :O)
5/27/11 24.99 26.99 Rosewill RX35-AT-SU3 BLK USB 3.0 Ext. Encl.
- The Enclosure goes to sleep too much, and needs to support SATA revision 3.0. = Sucks, Avoid.
5/27/11 149.99 149.99 WD Caviar Black 2TB 7200 64MB SATA 6.0Gb/s
- Awesomeness.=-=-=-= NEW Links:
CPU: http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0354587
RAM: http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0347306
VID: http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0364079
MBD: http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0364229
CSE: http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0310581:O)
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markpouncey
September 02, 2011 at 2:30pm
Howdy-- i love this article & Max PC Mag... do ya'll know of a DVD i can buy or a youtube video or an online video somewhere that shows a start to finish assembly of a PC like this by the Max PC guys or one they would recommend ( Gordon or anyone w/ Max PC ) ? I've built a few of my own, and have an older VHS tape on how to do it-- but would like a newer, 21st century " Kick-Ass 9 " DVD if i could find one-- what do you think ??
Kind Regards mark-p ( markpouncey-at-gmail-dot-com )
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BK_NC
August 10, 2011 at 6:34pm
Where are the benchmarks? And one question I have is why couldn't you use this same game test suite on your Dream Machine 2011?
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MAXPCreader07
August 08, 2011 at 9:19am
I'd love to see what parts you would upgrade with the $100 spent on Windows.
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markstrelecki
August 01, 2011 at 4:31pm
I really LOVE articles like this - it's why I've subscribed to MaximumPC ever since it was called boot magazine.
But am I missing something here?
When I re-read the story on August 1st, the last line read:
"We then fired up Crysis 2, Left 4 Dead, Portal 2, Total War: Shogan 2, and Battlefield: Bad Company. All of the games ran with more-th "
...and left me HANGING, wanting more but getting none of it.
WTF???
Give me satisfaction, or give me Mac!
MARK STRELECKI, Proofreader for MaxPC in Training
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markstrelecki
September 05, 2011 at 3:59am
September 5th - article STILL not fixed. WASSUP, you guys???
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mightywien
July 18, 2011 at 10:04pm
I'll start off by saying that I have never even attempted to build a pc before. In fact, the August issue of MPC is the first pc-oriented magazine I've ever purchased. What drew me to it was this article.
I have always been a mac person. I mean, I know how to use a pc, but I've just always had a mac. Not only is my mac 6 years old, it's a powerbook ( I know, I know). I'm sick of the thing. Even when I could play WoW on it (which is the main game I play), it was terrible. Forget getting into any arena team or 25-man raid. The lag was unbearable.
Now I want to build this rig, but I've taken some advice from people on this thread and deviated slightly. Instead of the Rosewill case, I took ScootieP's advice and got the Apex case (which was a friggin' steal on the egg and just looks waay better with that handle).
Everything else I got was the same as the build save for two things I haven't ordered yet: The optical drive and the motherboard. First things first, I noticed on someone's post here that the magazine's article has a typo and that instead of the Samsung SH-S222A I should get the SH-S223A (Which is what is listed in this article). The problem is that I looked for it and couldn't find it on the egg or anywhere else.
The second thing is that the magazine really recommends getting a better motherboard like the Gigabyte GA-P67A-UD3-B3. Well, the egg has this listed, but there are none in stock.
I’m not too worried about the optical drive. With a 20 buck pricetag, I can just go to Fry’s and ask for help there with one (although I’m sure some of you guys are much more knowledgeable and any advice is greatly appreciated). I want to know if getting the full-size board with four memory slots and a P-series chipset is even worth it if all I really plan on playing is WoW and maybe a few games like Witcher or Diablo III when it finally comes out?
Also, a quick question. When I ordered the GPU, there were 2 choices for the Radeon HD 6790. One was this PCI Express 2.1 x16 HDCP Ready CrossFireX Support Video Card (which is the one I figure I should get) and the other one was just PCI Express without the 2.1 or the x16. Am I correct in assuming the prior is the one I want?
Thanks to those of you who can help me out. Hell, thanks to any of you that read this whole thing. – A journey of 1,000 miles begins with a single step.
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rod28021
July 18, 2011 at 4:21pm
- CPU: Intel Core i3-2100 = $132
- MOTHERBOARD: GIGABYTE GA-H67M-D2-B3 = $90
- OPTICAL DRIVE: LiteOn x24 sata2 DL dvd-ram = $43
- PSU: 500 watt coolmax v-500 = $26
- RAM: Kingston ValueRAM memory 4 GB total = $42
- OS: WINDOWS 7 HOME PREMIUM OEM 32bit = $99
- Solid state drive: OCZ Onyx series - 32 GB - SATA2 = $70
- Hard Drive: Western Digital Caviar Green - 1 TB sata2 hard drive = $75
- Case: Viper ATX = $65
- Video Board: Visiontek Radeon HD 5670 = $117
My total $759 in July 2011
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Warrior017
July 15, 2011 at 9:55am
This is a very well put together rig. The only thing that I would've tried upgrading is the motherboard. I always go for high-quality boards, at least x16/x8/x8 and hopefully x16/x16/x8 PCIe slots, and dual- or triple-channel memory. But this is a budget build after all. The WD 'blue' and 'green' classes would bug me as well, as I always get 'black' drives (I do a lot of moving 2GB+ folders and files).
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cferran1
July 14, 2011 at 5:51am
There is typo in the model of the optical drive on the hardcopy of the magazine. The magazine lists it as a Samsung SH-S222A but that is an IDE drive. I bought it from Newegg and that is what I got. When I tried to install it I realized that it was not SATA. I checked my order, I checked the store, I checked Samsumg’s website and that drive is IDE. I see that you have corrected the model in the online version of the article. I should have checked those things before purchasing it but I trusted the magazine a bit too much. I could return it but shipping is going to take what they give me back so I better keep it as a souvenir. BTW, the motherboard upgrade that you suggest is no longer available. I tried to purchase it and it is no longer available (not out-of-stock).
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oldobamaliar
July 07, 2011 at 6:40pm
If you cant afford a ssd then your computer will be a piece of sheeit any way. SSD's are the single most important piece of hardware on any computer. If you dont think so you haven't used one.
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Jersey_Biker
June 22, 2011 at 6:15am
If you are replacing a system opposed to building an additional system there should be no need for a operating system unless you have something very old. XP and newer should suffice. That's also assuming you installed the OS on your old system yourself and it didn't come pre-installed. I would use the $100 budgeted for the OS for a i5-2500K CPU and use the remaining savings towards a better graphic card.
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MattyMattMatt
June 21, 2011 at 8:32pm
I would've gone for a GTX 460 768MB / 1GB or 6850 and switched to AMD for the CPU. X4 955 and a good AM3 board is still more than plenty for games and it can overclock quite nicely. Sure, the i3 will outperform it in dual core games at stock at least, but four real cores, why say no?
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jbwhite99
June 21, 2011 at 7:40pm
However, the "chips" are kinda crunchy.
I would rather dumb down the video card in the system and move up a little bit in processor. I got lucky and got a 5770 for $75 on a memorial day sale at the Egg - got more MB and processor than I will need for a while (2500k and an ASUS Evo board) - but this will allow me to use Premiere Elements to burn movies, etc. I only got the 5770 because it was $10 more than a 4670.
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Budgetperson
June 21, 2011 at 1:20pm
I really like the build, but I can't believe more people are bashing the dual core processor and not the power supply. Maybe Rosewill has gotten better, but I doubt it. More wattage won't help the reliability (I think the article implies it.. too lazy to go check), but a better brand will. Look at the Antec EA-430D on newegg. I have two Earthwatts power supplies and they have been great. Plus, it's $10 cheaper. Yay.
But otherwise, this is an excellent build.
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bling581
June 21, 2011 at 9:43am
"A tech media prediction says that optical drives will go away within five years."
That is very hard to believe. What are people supposed to play movies on? All programs will now be downloaded via the cloud? Yeah right.
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avenger48
June 26, 2011 at 12:18am
Hulu, Download.com, Steam, all of them make discs obsolete to some extent.
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T0mmy1977
July 07, 2011 at 10:45am
Yeah. My legit copy of Borderlands won't load because it fails the verification process, so I threw it away and will download it via Steam.
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Silencer
June 21, 2011 at 2:43pm
Ya, that caught my attention too.
WTF are they talking about here? I don't think this is ready yet:
http://www.maximumpc.com/article/news/researchers_develop_another_breakthrough_quantum_memory_storage
Ya, what the hell are they saying discs will be replaced with in 5 years, exactly?
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PCLinuxguy
June 24, 2011 at 5:29pm
I also agree. I mean when it comes to these kids these days with all their twitter, facecrap and basically living online rather than in the real world acound them, I can kinda see it, but for the rest of us who actually use computers, I don't see optical drives going away, they'll have a use somewhere. The only otehr thing i see that might trick people into thinking ODDs are going to fade is thatalot of games are either on consoles and/or it's all downloaded these days, with fewer discs for programs or games going around. USB flash storage can only do so much sometimes.
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Silencer
June 24, 2011 at 7:27pm
I'm thinking they *might* be thinking USB flash.
I know storage capacity prices, (hard drives and memory,) are still falling with Moore's Law, but still.
Plus, I'm of the opinion that those methods will never be better for long-term storage.
Maybe they're thinking that this, will cause that somehow:
NOT WORKING: www.digitimes.com/news/a20081201PD212.html SO:
(For some reason, the direct link (above) redirects to a stupid registration page. So just Google this:)
Pioneer showcases 16-layer 400GB optical disc
Click on the first result link, and you're there. (But a bookmark takes you to a stupid registration page.)
So, ya, I don't know. I'd still like to KNOW, what they're talking about.
Edit: Oh, and I know they want to "cloud" (control) everyone. That's probably what they're thinking.
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Dynotaku
June 21, 2011 at 9:40am
My 3 year old machine has a blu-ray optical drive in it... I think besides using it to install the OS, I've never used it. (As 2 of my 3 monitors aren't HDCP compliant, I can't watch blu-ray discs on the thing)
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Sid 6.7
June 21, 2011 at 4:03am
The GPU should be the EVGA GTX-560 SUPERCLOCKED 1GB. I made a mistake and listed the GPU as being from Asus.
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Sid 6.7
June 21, 2011 at 3:37am
Here is my version. All prices are after rebates and current discounts from Newegg.Com. If you don't mind shopping from multiple sources, you could save even more money.
$220 CPU: Intel Core i7 2500k
$110 MOBO: Gigabyte GA-P67A-D3-B3
$65 Case: Thermaltake Armor A60
$35 PSU: OCZ ModXStreme 500W Modular
$44 RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws X-Series 4GB DDR3 1600MHz CAS-9 (2x4GB)
$184 GPU: Asus GTX-560 Superclocked 1GB
$60 HDD: WD Blue 1TB 7200rpm SATA3 6Gb/s
$56 Optical: Liteon 4X Bluray/DVD Combo (player/Burner)Total Price = $775.
If I do say so myself, this would be a killer rig. Notice it's all premium, mainstream, enthusiast-targeted, brand name parts. You have overclocking ability right out of the box. Current-gen non-Ti ASUS factory overclocked Fermi GPU. SATA-3 hard drive. Tool-less mid-tower case. And you still have room to grow. Add another 4GB of RAM, add another GPU, drop in more HDDs, add some watercooling to the CPU for even higher overclocks ... etc.
If anyone would like the actual wishlist, give me your email, and I will send you a link.
I think one of the best factors of the current gaming market, is that we all have tons of choices available to us to get us where we want to go. And we can mix and match, and create a unique platform that expresses our individuality.
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avenger48
June 26, 2011 at 12:25am
You can get it under $700 if you swap out the case (for a Xigmatek Asgard 2), HDD (For a 500GB, 7200 RPM Seagate), and got a DVD burner instead of the Blu-ray drive.
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immersive
June 21, 2011 at 10:44am
I see a lot of trash talking a duel core CPU in the comments here.
Let me tell you a story of a duel core that could.
My old system:
Ram: Corsair Dominator 4GB (4 x 1GB) DDR2 1066
CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 Conroe 2.4GHz LGA 775 < OC @ 3.3GHz
MB: EVGA 122-CK-NF68-A1 LGA 775 NVIDIA nForce 680i SLI
HD: Western Digital Caviar Blue WD5000AAKS 500GB
Grapics: EVGA 896-P3-1171-AR GeForce GTX 275 Superclocked Edition 896MB
So how old is that computer? Well it was build on 6/7/07 with the GTX 275 added on 4/22/2009
I played everygame with maxed out settings other then Crysis only because I never bothered to buy that game. But I will say it ran Bad Company 2 at 1920 x 1200 with max settings just fine. The only game I had problems with max was Just Cause 2 and even then the settings were close to max.
The point is that ya a duel core may be "outdated" but if thats the case then so is just about all the software we all run. When all software scales with how ever many cpu cores there are we will all be in heaven.
If I was so happy with it why do I not have it now? Well the new Core i7-2600k just looked to tasty to pass up. Now granted I can backup my movies faster then I ever could with my E6600 but I can't tell a differance in Bad Company 2 at all.
So was the upgrade to 4 cores and 8 threads worth it? Well yes for me because I'm a power user! I also have a 27" Dell Ultra Sharp monitor with 1920x1200 res. Would it be worth while for my friend to upgrade to a $2000+ system when all he dose is surf the web and play a few games here and there on his 22" monitor that supports a max of 1680x1050 res? Hell no! I also bet this setup your all commenting on would do him just fine in Battlefield 3 also.
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joeking
June 21, 2011 at 6:51pm
Wow.. are you honestly trying to say you can run Bad Company 2 maxed out @ 1920 x 1200 on a E6600 Core 2 Duo? I call major B.S. right there.
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B.A.Frayd
June 22, 2011 at 12:02am
Absolutely, the BC2 commentary is complete bullshit. Why do people lie about stuff like this in forums?
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Scootiep
June 20, 2011 at 7:51pm
Ditch the Rosewill case and go for an APEX TX-381-C:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811154094
I've used it before and the handle is pretty solid, you actually get a top mounted, very usable set of front ports with a nice little clear flip down protector window. Kicks the Rosewill's A$$ easily. While it's listed at $29.99 w/ free shipping now, I've gotten it recently from newegg for $24.00 with free shipping off of a special offer.
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Scootiep
June 20, 2011 at 7:53pm
Meant to say w/o free shipping the first time. Sorry. Yeah, I know it's $10 more but most definitely worth it. And like I said, bide your time and you'll get it with free shipping anyway.
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PCLinuxguy
June 20, 2011 at 6:59pm
$667. not bad, but then the builder spoke of changes if the budget was higher. there's about a $30 gap before the $700 mark, which means a different motherboard or more ram in this instance for a slightly higher performing system or room to upgrade later. The biggest advantage is that it's a SandyBridge CPU, which for now is the current chipset that is being worked on, so there's going to be stuff coming for a little while for it compared to the LGA775 or 1156 non sandybridge i3-i7 dual and quad core chips. Not a bad build.
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quicks0rt
June 20, 2011 at 6:32pm
LoL@BF2 & 3
You think these are the only games people play? Even with 2 cores, i3 here will run faster in most benchmarks than the aging Athlon architecture w/ 4 cores, not to mention being cooler and less power hungry.
And really, did you not read the article? He clearly states he chose this over X4 because X4 was found lacking even in multi-threading benchmark!! If you don't believe this, head over to Anand or Toms for more comprehensive cpu comparison.
The single-thread performance on i3 will decimate any advantage Ahtlon will have by merely having 2 more cores, which is quite important for majority of current games and everyday software. Sorry, multi-threading is still ways to go, and some computing tasks are not just cut out for it.
And if you're worried about the future, i3 is still a better choice. Not only is this better gaming bang for the buck relatively to Athlon X4 now, but you have an upgrade path to i5 or i7, which pretty much runs circles around anything AMD has right now.
On top of that, QuickSync will be an asset down the road for video encoding if you pair this with the right motherboard, although this is not really a concern for a gamer, but still a nice icing on the cake.
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joeking
June 21, 2011 at 6:55pm
No, we don't think Battlefield is the only games people play. Of course not, but they're prime examples of where game architecture is going: multithreaded. Did YOU even read the article. We're talking about a gaming system here, why the hell you're bringing up synthetic benchmarks is beyond me.
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Sediket
June 20, 2011 at 6:23pm
Very nice how-to article, a lot of detail, very informative, and if your looking to build a new PC all bases are covered.
Thanks!
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jackal49
June 20, 2011 at 4:44pm
I recently built a $700 machine for my wife. I got most of the parts on sale, but it does the trick. She mostly wanted to run SIMS 3, but I was able to run Crysis at max settings at a res of 1440x900. It's not 1080p, but with the quad-core I can do all of my media encoding and ripping rather quickly. It also is very snappy with photoshop. She needed more CPU than GPU. And FYI, a 32 SSD is barely enough for Win 7, most programs, and Photoshop. If you don't mind installing programs like games and such on the HDD, then a 32Gb SSD should be plenty for a speedy OS Drive.
AMD Phenom II X4 925 Deneb quad-core 2.8GHz
ASUS M4A88T-I AM3 M-ITX mobo
2 x 4GB G.Skill DDR3 1333 SoDimm (on sale)
MSI HD 5770 1Gb Low-Profile GPU
Corsair Nova 32Gb SSD, Samsung Spinpoint 1Tb 7200 RPM
Sony Optiarc Slot-Loading Slimline DVD Burner (on sale)
Generic ITX Box with 350 Watt Power Supply (found locally)
Win 7 Home Prem 64-bit (on sale)
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