HeadsUp, on 14 February 2012 - 03:22, said:
Hey all, I'm looking to build my first Desktop PC. I've been gaming for some time now and have just used ASUS G series laptops to get the job done, but now that I'm settling down now I want to trade it in for a desktop. I love the idea of building my own gaming setup. I'm not an overclocker, I would like to stay around the $1300 USD range after rebates and I've come up with the following so far:
I don't tend to comment on PC builds, but I wanted to throw my own ideas into the mix.
First, if you wait a month or two, then Ivy Bridge processors will start to come out. They will run faster using less power, and supposedly be in the same price range. If that does not make you excited, then you should see the benefit of price reductions on Sandy Bridge CPUs. Ivy Bridge motherboards will also natively support USB 3.0 on them, rather than having a separate USB controller on the board doing the heavy lifting. If you're interested (and I am), then you may also be interested in the Thunderbolt motherboards that will start to come out around launch as well, which will finally bring Thunderbolt to the PC (excusing the one or two non-Mac laptops, and Sony's non-standard connection).
Also, do not neglect the onboard memory on your chosen video card. Why not get a graphics card with 2 GB of RAM?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E1681412760 ($15 more after the rebate)
I must also add that it is worth it to splurge a little on the case. I do not mean that you should get one based solely on looks, but you should consider the size of the internal case and the ability to work within it as you start to cram things into it, such as your cables. I went to scary the end of the spectrum when I built my last machine in late August with the Thermaltake Level 10 GT (
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16811133188). It's an attractive case to me, but more importantly it is the easiest case that I have ever worked with. There is tons of space and hard drive management could not be any easier. It's certainly expensive, but it was worth it to me.
Do not depend on mail-in rebates. I sent all of my rebate claims in on time and I still only received two of the four (they claimed to have mailed them). Free "gifts" (e.g., DVD drive) and instant rebates are definitely the way to go, but they are much rarer.
I built this in August for just under $1200 (I only broke $1000 because of the case). A lot of it was on sale, which I mostly got through the Newegg newsletters, which you must sign up for if you have not already because they send out coupon codes almost every other day!
Core i7-2600:
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16819115071
Sapphire FleX Radeon HD 6950 2 GB:
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16814102929
Corsair Vengence 16 GB (4 x 4 GB) DDR3 1600:
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16820233143 (this was a Shell Shocker deal for $85; you probably don't need 16 GB, and I have even seen places suggest that too much memory can actually be a negative, but I wanted 16 GB)
OCZ ModXStream (600W):
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16817341017
ASUS Motherboard that sucks:
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16813131773 (DO NOT GET THIS ONE; it has extremely annoying feedback when using the onboard audio)
OCZ Vertex 3 120 GB SSD:
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16820227729
Thermaltake Level 10 GT:
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16811133188
Other than the onboard audio issues that ruins the motherboard for me, I love this machine. It is incredibly fast and I have my video card driving two 24" monitors, as well as my 1080p TV simultaneously (I can use the TV as a third desktop, but I never do; I generally use it to run Hulu videos while I program). In terms of video cards, I have nothing against nVidia, but my current preference is AMD and they seem to enjoying a better performance/dollar ratio for now. My video card is actually capable of driving the sound to my TV and it removes the onboard audio issue when I do that (as it has its own sound hardware).
I have G.Skill RAM in my laptop, as well as my girlfriend's laptop. I have nothing to complain about it except it increased my posting time, but that is the BIOS' fault. I bought the power supply because it came with a free DVD burner. There are slightly better power supplies out there, but this is both efficient and extremely convenient in terms of cable management.
As everyone has said, go with an SSD. You will not regret it. Windows 7 boots in under 30 seconds for me; it spends longer posting than it does booting.