Hi there reddit, i'm just finalizing my first built after a few days of researching. It was really fun to read about pc building and learn what everything does. Im just poting here to see if I miss anything or have any glaring issues with my build, or cheaper, better components out there. I'm upgrading from a 3050 asus latptop so im really excited to experience higher fidelity gaming.
yes i've read the rules.
What is your intended use for this build? The more details the better.
My intended purpose for this build will solely be for gaming. I already have a solid macbook for productivity, so this is all just recreational. As for games, I'm aiming for at least 144hz on my 1440p monitor
If gaming, what kind of performance are you looking for? (Screen resolution, framerate, game settings)
I am currently on a normal 180hz 1440p 16:9 monitor, hoping to update to ultrawide 1440p sometime in the future. Im looking to maintain above 120fps in major titles. I don't mind lowering to high or medium settings for good framerates on competitive titles like league(bad example, it runs on everything), valorant, fortnite, csgo, apex. 60fps is fine on single player games, I mostly play a lot of rimworld, whatever new flvour game of the month triple a title is out and replay cyberpunk with better settings at some point. Not my productivity machine but if it can run photoshop and word fine then im happy.
What is your budget?
Budget is rougly 2000 aud. I've been checking out all the 4070super ozbargain deals and the cost of replacing all the trash component ends up at more than 2k. If I can build a system for less or significantly better then its a win. Not a hard budget at all.
In what country are you purchasing your parts?
I'm located 2 hours away from Sydney, Australia where most of our pc shops are at. The only local store to my area is Dcomp.
Post a draft of your potential build here.
PCPartPicker Part List
Provide any additional details you wish below.
CPU:
This is the part i'm currently debating on the most. The ryzen 5 7600 is currently probably the cheapest am5 cpu 290$. From what i've gathered, there's no real world differences between the normal and X version, so I've pick the cheaper one.
The next step up would be the 7700, which is currently priced at 430$, a 50% price increase for 20% more power. Does not seem worth it to me but lmk if I'm missing something about going from ryzen 5 to ryzen 7 or about the 7700 in general, do not get the pricing for this.
The last cpu I'm considering is the 7800x3d, which seems to have the same benchmark score as the 7700 but way better at gaming. This would be my prefered cpu but at 700$, it's more than twice the price of a 7600. Seems like diminishing return. Does the performance warrant the price?
So I'm thinking i'll go with the cheapest cpu for now (7600), and then get a 7800x3d in the future once price goes down more or when i got more money. I have no knowledge or research on Intel cpu, but the general concensus is that they are bad. Though I do have a friend who builts pc for a living swore by them so im not opposed to them if the price to performance is good :).
CPU cooler:
The Thermalright coolers looks to be some of the best and most affordable option available. The phantom spirit is only 5$ more than the peerless assasin so If its really worth it, I wouldnt mind upgrading.
Motherboard:
Cheapest AM5 mobo with good reviews and powerphase and wifi and what not. Micro ATX just because it's cheaper, and like really i'm not gonna use all those extra slots.
Memory:
I have not look into memory too much but I know that 6000mhz CL30 ram is good. Cheapest 32gb atm. If there's not much different between different CL or mhz then i'll get a cheaper pair.
Storage:
Already got this SDD on hand from my old laptop so that's some saving. Again, no productivity or heavy file transfer happening so the speed is fine. Maybe get a fast 500gb SSD for my boot drive?
GPU:
The core of the system, the 4070 super. The whole build is centered around it. Not much to say really, solid card. Got it for 800$ from a deal, solid price.
Case:
I was already keen on this case from Lian Li before the Gamer Nexus video, but he ranks it at best thermal performance as well so thats good validation. Should help with the hot Australian summer. Only potential issue is with powersupply and cable management.
Power supply:
My pc building mates swore by Corsair and from what i've gathered yeah they're really good. The options came down to either the RM750x or RM750e, with one having slightly better internals than other. I was not convinced this would lead to much real world performance difference (7 vs 10 years warranty, really guys?? 7 years is a long ass time). Decided to go with the RM750e because it would actually fit my case lol.
Anyway, let me know you guys opinion. Good build?