I finished my computer build. I was so nervous the whole time phew, but she works and she boots into bios, so just gotta get the OS on there tomorrow, and spend Saturday copying files/installing stuff.
Part list and final build cost below the cut if anyone is interested~
MSI Performance Gaming AMD Ryzen 1st and 2nd Gen AM4 M.2 USB 3 DDR4 mobo
Crucial MX500 500GB 3D NAND SATA M.2 Type SSD (for OS and maaaaybe to load sims for fast boot idk)
Western Digital RE4 WD2003FYYS 2TB HHD (general storage)
16GB RAM
CORSAIR RMX Series (2018), RM550x PSU
Total Build cost: $930 (this includes a new copy of Win 10)
If longevity of my old build serves as any guide, this should last me at LEAST 5 years (my old build is 7 years old and just now getting phased out, so it still has maybe 2 years on it of light usage if I wanted to buy Win 10 for it since 7 is going out of support in 2020)
Have I gone too far? Or have I gone NOT TOO FAR ENOUGH?
Some notes on rebulding my computer below.
Sorry the gifs are kinda meh.
So first of all, full confession, I bought that 2060 back in uh... *checks notes* March? I think I posted about this somewhere. And then it wouldn’t fit in my case, so I bought a new case, and then was real busy for a weekend or two and then... the entire project just... laid forgotten. Because I’m a lazy bitch like that sometimes.
So yeah for like six months I had a bright shiny new video card and case and didn’t use them.
Last weekend I got fed up with myself and moved it all to the new case. I showed some pictures to my coworkers and one was like “Ew, why do you still have that Intel stock fan on your processor?” Also I agreed, it looked like crap and was on sideways so, I decided to get a better processor fan. Also, the red fan on top was never my favorite, it came with my previous case, and was really harshing the vibe I was going for. So this week I spent like $40 more on a much better heatsink/fan for the processor and some other purple fans for the top and back.
I would highly NOT reccommend that particular heatsink / fan I got. It was, by far, the most frustrating part of this entire build and very high in the list of most frustrating components I’ve ever installed on any computer, ever, and I’ve been building my own computers since the late 90′s. It may be better on some motherboards, but the base that fits on the back of the motherboard doesn’t quite line up with the holes in the motherboard because there’s a slight bump on the processor backing. So TBH, the fan itself is only anchored on two sides and I’ll be keeping a close eye on if it starts wiggling free in a few months.
Also, turns out my motherboard is old enough where it doesn’t have the required plug for RGB control for a heatsink/fan with RGB, so I was hoping that I could get it to sync with the video card RGB. And it would, but since I can’t plug that control in, instead it’ll just be a fun rainbow spin all the time. It doesn’t match like I want it to. But that’s my own fault for not having a newer motherboard. I don’t see myself getting a new MB for another year or two so, for now, this is how it is.
The top fans are a bit brighter than I was hoping for honestly, I was kind of thinking they’d have the softer purple glow like the 2 purple Corsair fans in the front, but honestly, they work and I like them? I mean I like the color they give off when not looking at the fans themselves, they’re a bit bright when you look at them. My only real complaint about them is that they have a cord which can connect to a power supply with two different adapters and there’s not enough space between the two adapter types on the wire, so the much larger and uglier adapter was difficult to hidefor both, but after some finagling, you can barely see them, and not at all in those pictures.
I TRULY love this case and can’t imagine replacing it anytime soon. The glass front is easy to get off and put back on, the case back is well laid out (even if I didn’t manage the cables as well as I could have), there’s plenty of space and it even thoughtfully left space open to easily put the mount on the heatsink back so i didn’t have to take the entire motherboard out. (I would have returned the heatsink before doing that, tbh.)
I think I’m done tinkering with it for a year or two, though.
So, current specs in my Mid-Range gaming PC:
Motherboard: MSI Z370-A Pro
Processor: Intel 8th Gen Core i5-8400 Processor
Video Card: Strix GeForce RTX 2060
Case: NZXT H500
RAM: G.SKILL FORTIS Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) 288-Pin DDR4 SDRAM DDR4 2400 (Maybe my next upgrade.)
Mouse: Logitech G600 MMO Gaming Mouse
Keyboard: Microsoft Ergonomic keyboard (I really want a comfortable mechanical ergonomic keyboard RGB but haven’t found anything viable yet.)
Sound: Logitech G533 Wireless Gaming Headset
Monitors: 2x ASUS VE278H 27" Full HD 1920x1080 HDMI VGA Back-lit LED Monitor. Honestly, after memory, I want to upgrade to get a 4k gaming monitor here next. But they’re fine.
Storage: 2TB hard drive, 3TB in SSDs
B: BoyThat’sALotOfStuff:WD Black 2TB Performance Desktop Hard Disk Drive - Slow but reliable storage for pictures, media, backups of stuff from old hard drives, general file / archive drive.
C: LocalDisk - Samsung 840 Series SSD 250 GB for Windows and misc. programs installed.
G: Games - Samsung 850 EVO 500TB SSD for video games... only about 50gb free on this one.
M: MassEffect - another 250gb Samsung 840 Series for all 4 Mass Effect games + Mods, also all three Dragon Ag games and The Sims 4 are on there too. I’d move The Sims off if it wasn’t such a hassle.
S: SoManyGames - Samsung 860 QVO 1TB SSD... Oh yeah uh, I bought this on sale like a year ago and FORGOT and found it while doing some housecleaning recently, and literally installed it yesterday. I think I’m gonna download and install a lot more games now.
V: Video Games - My other main 1TB SSD for Video Games.... only about 25% full. I think this is also Samsung, but not 100% sure.
I have a pretty silly question if there's any hardware enthusiasts out there who wouldn't mind sharing your expertise... it's been a long time since I've been in the computer building game. Are the rigs they're selling nowadays complete from the box built with proprietary hardware like the vid cards or can you customise with upgrades still like we used to and was commonplace basically it was the standard normal thing.
I'm looking at an MSI build but the v-card is 8gb and I'd like to have more vram than that. There's another Nvidia model with double that.
I don't really want to have a custom kit built for me from an outfit that does that, as that would add a few hundreds even thousands and take longer probably when I can just go round the shop and cash and carry. plus I'd agonise over decisions and would want to deep research every single component and I have -no- capacity to do so at this time
Also for anyone who has some level of expertise, what's the best v card out there these days? Nvidia or AMD or something else entirely?
stab in the dark but thought I'd ask. I used to have expert mates to consult but that was a long time ago. Lol feels like another life now
I promise I will ask no questions about current chipsets. I just do not want to even go there Lmao
Hey, I'm looking to get a gaming computer, using my TV as the monitor, and don't know where to look or turn to. I'm a pretty casual gamer and just looking for something beefy enough to run my games. I play things like Sims, Minecraft, and other building type games.
If anyone can give me any advice and what to buy, where to go would really appreciate it.
In the words of my fourth main:
“My baby‼️”
Specs:
CPU: Ryzen 5 1500x
GPU: EVGA Superclocked GTX 1080
Storage: WD 1 TB
Memory: GSkill Ripjaws V 16 GB (2x8) DDR4 @ 2133 PS: EVGA 650 G2
Case: Corsair Carbide Alpha Spec series (Black/Red) Peripherals: S/O to Jacob for doing all the work and giving me gummy sharks.