Light Gaming Desktop
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@scottalanmiller said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@thwr said in Light Gaming Desktop:
Just found this: http://www.hardware-revolution.com/best-cpu-apu-processor-july-2016/
According to this, AMD A10-7890K should give you "ok" performance for non 2016-AAA titles. Approx. 150 USD, but you can save on the dedicated GPU. Maybe search for a prebuilt system with that CPU?
You could also go for an Intel APU (CPU and GPU on the same chip), but really, Nvidia and AMD both are veterans here, Intel is more or less a newcomer in 3D gaming.
Intel GPU cause non-stop crashes, too. Totally unstable from what I've seen. I'd be more comfortable setting her up with an AMD APU. This looks like a good option to me.
Would be the best option on a budget system. The A10's R7 isn't bad at all. Plus, you can upgrade to a dedicated GPU if required.
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@scottalanmiller You could invest the saved money in a better cooling system (and case), maybe a closed-loop watercooler. You can get them for around 50-80$
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Definitely agree with @thwr ...
AMD's APU is far superior to Intel's iGPU. You can game a fair amount on their integrated graphics unit. You get about 4 cores of CPU, and 8 cores of GPU. An A10 is about as high as you can go. You'll save yourself from having to buy a graphics card since you aren't doing AAA. The flexibility will come in the future if she decides she does want to play AAA, she won't need a whole new PC, she can just buy a graphics card that can keep up. Something like an AMD R9 390 would suffice. Sapphire makes a real good one for $300.
I prefer AMD graphics for budget gaming, and Intel CPUs. But Intel is spendy and you're talking about ultra low budget at $600. AMD can get that done and she could grow into the card if need be. If not, then there is no loss.
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http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819113402&cm_re=a10-7890k--19-113-402--Product
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@BBigford said in Light Gaming Desktop:
Definitely agree with @thwr ...
AMD's APU is far superior to Intel's iGPU. You can game a fair amount on their integrated graphics unit. You get about 4 cores of CPU, and 8 cores of GPU. An A10 is about as high as you can go. You'll save yourself from having to buy a graphics card since you aren't doing AAA. The flexibility will come in the future if she decides she does want to play AAA, she won't need a whole new PC, she can just buy a graphics card that can keep up. Something like an AMD R9 390 would suffice. Sapphire makes a real good one for $300.
I prefer AMD graphics for budget gaming, and Intel CPUs. But Intel is spendy and you're talking about ultra low budget at $600. AMD can get that done and she could grow into the card if need be. If not, then there is no loss.
But there's one drawback: The A10's CPU isn't very fast and you can't upgrade to a FX series CPU because it's another socket (FM2+ on A8/10 and AM3+ on FX83xx). On the other hand, the total price for a FX8320 and a new board is way below the price of a Core i5 without a board.
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@thwr said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@BBigford said in Light Gaming Desktop:
Definitely agree with @thwr ...
AMD's APU is far superior to Intel's iGPU. You can game a fair amount on their integrated graphics unit. You get about 4 cores of CPU, and 8 cores of GPU. An A10 is about as high as you can go. You'll save yourself from having to buy a graphics card since you aren't doing AAA. The flexibility will come in the future if she decides she does want to play AAA, she won't need a whole new PC, she can just buy a graphics card that can keep up. Something like an AMD R9 390 would suffice. Sapphire makes a real good one for $300.
I prefer AMD graphics for budget gaming, and Intel CPUs. But Intel is spendy and you're talking about ultra low budget at $600. AMD can get that done and she could grow into the card if need be. If not, then there is no loss.
But there's one drawback: The A10's CPU isn't very fast and you can't upgrade to a FX series CPU because it's another socket (FM2+ on A8/10 and AM3+ on FX83xx). On the other hand, the total price for a FX8320 and a new board is way below the price of a Core i5 without a board.
I'm not saying there isn't a bottle neck for AAA titles on an AMD APU... FX requires a discrete GPU though, so that is minimum $150 more for the most bottom of the barrel card that could handle medium settings on a AAA. When you're talking about $600 budget gaming, you've really no other option...
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@BBigford said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@thwr said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@BBigford said in Light Gaming Desktop:
Definitely agree with @thwr ...
AMD's APU is far superior to Intel's iGPU. You can game a fair amount on their integrated graphics unit. You get about 4 cores of CPU, and 8 cores of GPU. An A10 is about as high as you can go. You'll save yourself from having to buy a graphics card since you aren't doing AAA. The flexibility will come in the future if she decides she does want to play AAA, she won't need a whole new PC, she can just buy a graphics card that can keep up. Something like an AMD R9 390 would suffice. Sapphire makes a real good one for $300.
I prefer AMD graphics for budget gaming, and Intel CPUs. But Intel is spendy and you're talking about ultra low budget at $600. AMD can get that done and she could grow into the card if need be. If not, then there is no loss.
But there's one drawback: The A10's CPU isn't very fast and you can't upgrade to a FX series CPU because it's another socket (FM2+ on A8/10 and AM3+ on FX83xx). On the other hand, the total price for a FX8320 and a new board is way below the price of a Core i5 without a board.
I'm not saying there isn't a bottle neck for AAA titles on an AMD APU... FX requires a discrete GPU though, so that is minimum $150 more for the most bottom of the barrel card that could handle medium settings on a AAA. When you're talking about $600 budget gaming, you've really no other option...
Aye, that's why I suggested an A10, decent GPU, ok CPU, good enough overall. Like you said, there's not much room for 600$.
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@thwr said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@BBigford said in Light Gaming Desktop:
Definitely agree with @thwr ...
AMD's APU is far superior to Intel's iGPU. You can game a fair amount on their integrated graphics unit. You get about 4 cores of CPU, and 8 cores of GPU. An A10 is about as high as you can go. You'll save yourself from having to buy a graphics card since you aren't doing AAA. The flexibility will come in the future if she decides she does want to play AAA, she won't need a whole new PC, she can just buy a graphics card that can keep up. Something like an AMD R9 390 would suffice. Sapphire makes a real good one for $300.
I prefer AMD graphics for budget gaming, and Intel CPUs. But Intel is spendy and you're talking about ultra low budget at $600. AMD can get that done and she could grow into the card if need be. If not, then there is no loss.
But there's one drawback: The A10's CPU isn't very fast and you can't upgrade to a FX series CPU because it's another socket (FM2+ on A8/10 and AM3+ on FX83xx). On the other hand, the total price for a FX8320 and a new board is way below the price of a Core i5 without a board.
Definitely agree. You're saving money initially but spending more in the long run due to the inability to upgrade. Scott already knows this though
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Slightly more then 600$ but PC Gamer generally has a decent budget build.
http://www.pcgamer.com/pc-build-guide-budget-gaming-pc/
Never been a big fan of the i3 processors but given the budget and potential use this may fit the bill. They also offer options for lower prices, but you'd lose some features. For instance the motherboard can be replaced with a different chipset but you'd lose the overclocking ability. From the sounds of it this wouldn't be a bad deal since this user probably wouldn't be doing any overclocking.
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I've got an Alienware Alpha console that is pretty sweet. The base model has an i3 and 4 gigs of memory, I doubled the RAM and put in an SSD and it performs admirably for the price (starting around $500).
http://www.dell.com/us/p/alienware-alpha-r2-desktop/pd?~ck=mn​
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@RojoLoco said in Light Gaming Desktop:
I've got an Alienware Alpha console that is pretty sweet. The base model has an i3 and 4 gigs of memory, I doubled the RAM and put in an SSD and it performs admirably for the price (starting around $500).
http://www.dell.com/us/p/alienware-alpha-r2-desktop/pd?~ck=mn​
I want to get a Steam Machine version of that... but some of the other vendors had really good options for a similar price.
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In that price range it is hard to build for better or less than OEMs. I've had good experiences with iBuyPower machines, but there are so many options. A refurb might be a good direction to go too.
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@Kelly said in Light Gaming Desktop:
In that price range it is hard to build for better or less than OEMs. I've had good experiences with iBuyPower machines, but there are so many options. A refurb might be a good direction to go too.
Yeah, it's hard to beat iBuyPower or CyberPower most of the time. A couple weeks ago I got some friends kid a system from CyberPower, I don't think they've seen him since we got it plugged in.
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@travisdh1 said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@Kelly said in Light Gaming Desktop:
In that price range it is hard to build for better or less than OEMs. I've had good experiences with iBuyPower machines, but there are so many options. A refurb might be a good direction to go too.
Yeah, it's hard to beat iBuyPower or CyberPower most of the time. A couple weeks ago I got some friends kid a system from CyberPower, I don't think they've seen him since we got it plugged in.
Agreed. I'd say the only reason to build your own is if you want the experience, or if you are willing to wait for every single component to go on deep sale to beat an OEM assembler (assuming your time is worth $0)
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@travisdh1 said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@Kelly said in Light Gaming Desktop:
In that price range it is hard to build for better or less than OEMs. I've had good experiences with iBuyPower machines, but there are so many options. A refurb might be a good direction to go too.
Yeah, it's hard to beat iBuyPower or CyberPower most of the time. A couple weeks ago I got some friends kid a system from CyberPower, I don't think they've seen him since we got it plugged in.
We found a super cheap CyberPower that might be the way that she goes.
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@scottalanmiller said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@travisdh1 said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@Kelly said in Light Gaming Desktop:
In that price range it is hard to build for better or less than OEMs. I've had good experiences with iBuyPower machines, but there are so many options. A refurb might be a good direction to go too.
Yeah, it's hard to beat iBuyPower or CyberPower most of the time. A couple weeks ago I got some friends kid a system from CyberPower, I don't think they've seen him since we got it plugged in.
We found a super cheap CyberPower that might be the way that she goes.
I.... very much disagree. As a prior boutique builder, there is a lot to be said about pre-built rigs vs. building your own. Has little to do with the experience, or saving money. It's the exact comparison I would use as another thread going on that's based around buying a Synology box or building up a SAM-SD. They both serve pretty much the same function, one just performs a lot better but doesn't have a single point of contact for support.
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@BBigford said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@scottalanmiller said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@travisdh1 said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@Kelly said in Light Gaming Desktop:
In that price range it is hard to build for better or less than OEMs. I've had good experiences with iBuyPower machines, but there are so many options. A refurb might be a good direction to go too.
Yeah, it's hard to beat iBuyPower or CyberPower most of the time. A couple weeks ago I got some friends kid a system from CyberPower, I don't think they've seen him since we got it plugged in.
We found a super cheap CyberPower that might be the way that she goes.
I.... very much disagree. As a prior boutique builder, there is a lot to be said about pre-built rigs vs. building your own. Has little to do with the experience, or saving money. It's the exact comparison I would use as another thread going on that's based around buying a Synology box or building up a SAM-SD. They both serve pretty much the same function, one just performs a lot better but doesn't have a single point of contact for support.
But if price is the bottom line, that's hard to compete with because pre-built ones offer pricing that is super competitive.
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@BBigford said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@scottalanmiller said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@travisdh1 said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@Kelly said in Light Gaming Desktop:
In that price range it is hard to build for better or less than OEMs. I've had good experiences with iBuyPower machines, but there are so many options. A refurb might be a good direction to go too.
Yeah, it's hard to beat iBuyPower or CyberPower most of the time. A couple weeks ago I got some friends kid a system from CyberPower, I don't think they've seen him since we got it plugged in.
We found a super cheap CyberPower that might be the way that she goes.
I.... very much disagree. As a prior boutique builder, there is a lot to be said about pre-built rigs vs. building your own. Has little to do with the experience, or saving money. It's the exact comparison I would use as another thread going on that's based around buying a Synology box or building up a SAM-SD. They both serve pretty much the same function, one just performs a lot better but doesn't have a single point of contact for support.
No one said that SAM-SD doesn't have a single point of contact for support, it certainly can. We only said that a NAS must have a single point of contact for support or it can't be a NAS. That one must have that option does not preclude that the other cannot have it.
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@scottalanmiller said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@BBigford said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@scottalanmiller said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@travisdh1 said in Light Gaming Desktop:
@Kelly said in Light Gaming Desktop:
In that price range it is hard to build for better or less than OEMs. I've had good experiences with iBuyPower machines, but there are so many options. A refurb might be a good direction to go too.
Yeah, it's hard to beat iBuyPower or CyberPower most of the time. A couple weeks ago I got some friends kid a system from CyberPower, I don't think they've seen him since we got it plugged in.
We found a super cheap CyberPower that might be the way that she goes.
I.... very much disagree. As a prior boutique builder, there is a lot to be said about pre-built rigs vs. building your own. Has little to do with the experience, or saving money. It's the exact comparison I would use as another thread going on that's based around buying a Synology box or building up a SAM-SD. They both serve pretty much the same function, one just performs a lot better but doesn't have a single point of contact for support.
No one said that SAM-SD doesn't have a single point of contact for support, it certainly can. We only said that a NAS must have a single point of contact for support or it can't be a NAS. That one must have that option does not preclude that the other cannot have it.
Yeah I misunderstood.
But I won't pull this thread off topic in my misunderstanding! Won't do it!