Sabtu, 22 Maret 2014

Gaming computer for $1,000-1,200?

Q. I have a pretty small budget, but do you know of a gaming computer that is around $1,000-$1,200 primarily? The most I'll go is $1,400 if I must. I don't play a lot of games, so HD space doesn't need to be extravagant; honestly, I'll probably only play WoW and miscellaneous games such as Borderlands or something. I won't play BC3 or anything that runs graphics extremely high, but I do definitely want to play WoW on ultra graphics with 40+ FPS. Do you have any recommendations? I don't really have any limitations as long as it fits in my budget frame. Thank you in advance!
Sorry, I forgot to add that I do not know how to build my own computer. If you can recommend parts, that would be great to know, but I can't build my own computer with just parts, I would have to have someone build it for me.

A. You can find a pre-built system which will accomplish that for under $1000.

Take this:
http://www.cyberpowerpc.com/system/Mega_Special_III/

The default configuration is good enough, but I suggest choosing a slightly better graphics card. Upgrade from the default Radeon HD 7750 to a Radeon HD 6850 for just $31 more. Then choose 64-bit Windows 7 as your operating system. Your cost before taxes/shipping is $954.

Or you could buy this pre-built system, which is even faster in WoW and costs less:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883229297

But the absolute best value/dollar (short of having someone build from scratch) is having someone perform a couple of upgrades for you.

Buy this starting computer.
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/Gateway+-+Desktop+-+8GB+Memory+-+1TB+Hard+Drive/3155928.p?id=1218380518359&skuId=3155928&st=gateway%20desktop&cp=1&lp=2

Then replace the included graphics card and power supply with these:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814102908
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817341017

That's a total of $805 and you've got a system equivalent to the $954 CyberpowerPC unit, without having to pay $80 for shipping either! That really is the best bang/buck. If you're not comfortable replacing the graphics card and power supply yourself, spend $20 on pizza and invite a techy friend over to help you out ;) Or in the worst case, have a local computer shop do it for you- they shouldn't charge more than $50.

Anyway, that system will get you about 57-60fps in WoW on ultra settings at 1920x1080.

The Radeon HD 6770 (a renamed 5770) and GeForce GTX 550 Ti get about 40fps:
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/Zotac/GeForce_GT_520/18.html

And the Radeon HD 6850 is quite a bit more powerful. If you wanted to spend $25 more for a Radeon HD 6870, you'd get about 70fps in WoW.
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/HIS/Radeon_HD_6870/22.html

Good luck!


What is a good gaming computer for less than $1,000?
Q. I'm looking for a new computer to play games, and my budget is $0 - $1,000...

A. You could build a good one for that much if you have the know how. If you dont look at dell under the XPS systems. They start at $899.99 and if you upgrade the ram to 4gigs and upgrade the video card to the Radeon HD4670 it should put you right about $1,000.





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Computer specs question/game?

Q. I'm REALLY new to the whole PC gaming scene, but I was wondering if this computer has the specs to run a game like Arma2/Dayz or possible Arma3?
ASUS K55N-DS81.
I has an AMD Quad-Core A8-4500M, 1.9GHz processor, and 4GB of DDR3 memory.
500GB HDD,and and AMD Radeon HD 7640G card.
It has windows 8 and 4GB of memory but it can support 8.
I "think" that covers the specs, but i could be wrong, like I said I know next to nothing about PC's.
I don't really care about high graphics so medium-low is fine with me. thx.

A. Let me first give a touch of background.
Laptops in the standard 15.6" size range from about $260 to almost $3000. There are certainly a lot of really low performing very cheap ones around with C and E series AMD cpus that belong in a netbook, and the Celerons and Pentiums of Intel with a workable cpu, but graphics that does not go with any games unless you consider Minecraft and League of Legends on low-medium to be gaming.

Specific to that one - The A8-4500M has been around about a year, introduced in May 2012.
The 7640G, like all G graphics, is a separate graphics processor co-packaged with the CPU and not a "graphics card" any more than Intel Integrated where it is part of a single chip. The Asus and a Samsung version (I bought the Samsung) is OK other than running a bit hot in most uses. They are two decent brands along with Lenovo Ideapads and Thinkpads, Sony.
Group Acer-gateway, Lenovo Essentials, HP Pavilion, Dell Inspiron, Toshiba Satellite, HP-Compaq, as all in the cheaper construction quality, and PCWorld, Rescuecom, Squaretrade studies do generally agree. That laptop, like mine, was $380 to $420, and now is only as leftovers.

For the exact answer now, the graphics is gaming determines the play unless bottlenecked by a low end CPU or insufficient DRAM.
GPU to gaming:
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Computer-Games-on-Laptop-Graphic-Cards.13849.0.html
CPU ranks
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Mobile-Processors-Benchmarklist.2436.0.html
The graphics, at rank 222 is above HD 4000 of Intel, but not by a lot.
For a better picture of non-listed games,
CAN I RUN of Game-debate says:
Arma 3 should not run even on lowest settings
http://www.game-debate.com/games/index.php?g_id=1855&game=ArmA+III&p_make=AMD&p_deriv=APU+A8-4500M+Quad+Core&gc_make=ATI&gc_deriv=Radeon+HD+7640G&ram=4&checkSubmit=#systemRequirements
Arma II and DayZ are playable low-medium, probably close to 30 frames per second
http://www.game-debate.com/games/index.php?g_id=516&game=ArmA+II&p_make=AMD&p_deriv=APU+A8-4500M+Quad+Core&gc_make=ATI&gc_deriv=Radeon+HD+7640G&ram=4&checkSubmit=#systemRequirements
http://www.game-debate.com/games/index.php?g_id=516&game=ArmA+II&p_make=AMD&p_deriv=APU+A8-4500M+Quad+Core&gc_make=ATI&gc_deriv=Radeon+HD+7640G&ram=4&checkSubmit=#systemRequirements

This ACer is about the starting point of Arma3 at $530
http://www.game-debate.com/games/index.php?g_id=1855&game=ArmA+III&p_make=AMD&p_deriv=APU+A8-5550M+Quad-Core&gc_make=ATI&gc_deriv=Radeon+HD+8750M+2GB+DDR3&ram=4&checkSubmit=#systemRequirements
Happens to also be enough for maximum settings to its display on DayZ Arma2
http://www.game-debate.com/games/index.php?g_id=4843&game=DayZ&p_make=AMD&p_deriv=APU+A8-5550M+Quad-Core&gc_make=ATI&gc_deriv=Radeon+HD+8750M+2GB+DDR3&ram=4&checkSubmit=#systemRequirements
Can't say about overheating or build quality, but that is the starting price to get what you are thinking you want. It is definitely a bargain for the price it costs. Ranking:
NVIDIA GeForce GT 640M
AMD Radeon HD 7730M
AMD Radeon HD 8750M << The Acer
NVIDIA GeForce GT 735M
Just a couple of years ago, a laptop at this performance was about $650 to $700 typically.

A Desktop PC with A8-5500 and HD 7560D does run medium at 30 frames per second on DAYZ ARMA2. That does not mean an HD 7640G will also. You can't SWAG without data.
http://www.game-debate.com/games/index.php?g_id=4843&game=DayZ&p_make=AMD&p_deriv=APU+A8-5500&gc_make=ATI&gc_deriv=Radeon+HD+7560D&ram=4&checkSubmit=#systemRequirements


Need help building a <700$ Gaming Computer 2012?
Q. Parts not required : Keyboard , Monitor , Mouse , Speakers , OS , Modem
Monitor resolution : 1360 x 768
Preffered site : www.newegg.com
Able to run the following game on it's highest : Battlefield 3 , Diablo 3 , Crysis 3 , Borderlands 2
MOBO : None
Optical drive : ASUS DRW-24B1ST/BLK/B/AS Black SATA 24X DVD Burner - Bulk - OEM
Case : Rosewill CHALLENGER Black Gaming ATX Mid Tower Computer Case,
HDD : None <500GB>
GPU : XFX Double D HD-687A-ZDFC Radeon HD 6870
PSU : None
CPU : None <Quad core + At least 3GHz>
CPU Cooler : COOLER MASTER Hyper 212 EVO
RAM : G.SKILL Ripjaws Series 8GB (2 x 4GB)
Please help me fill in the one with None(s) in it with the following requirement

A. Generally, you either go dual core i3 on the cpu, or AMD FX-4100, so, lets go with the FX-4100 with the 4 locked cores.
www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu_list.php
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103996

I don't see a core unlocker, but everything else on this MB looks good enough:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131767
www.asus.com/Motherboards/
AMD_AM3Plus/M5A97/
reconnect above
Bundles with good memory
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ComboDealDetails.aspx?ItemList=Combo.1005496
or the CPU:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ComboDealDetails.aspx?ItemList=Combo.985605
And choose a Sata III (6Gb/s) 7200 rpm drive
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=100007603%20600003340&IsNodeId=1&bop=And&SrchInDesc=6%2E0gb%2Fs&Page=1&PageSize=20
You can wait with a cpu cooler.
To go with the HD 6870, you will need a power supply to handle
151 Watts as 500 Watt min & 28 Amps on 12V
http://www.game-debate.com/hardware/index.php?gid=452&graphics=Radeon%20HD%206870
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Computer-Games-on-Laptop-Graphic-Cards.13849.0.html
This would work:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817159125
or: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817159128
GPU? http://www.amazon.com/XFX-Radeon-MINIDP-PCI-E-HD687AZHFC/dp/B005C31F2M/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1343704848&sr=8-1&keywords=XFX+Double+D+HD-687A-ZDFC+Radeon+HD+6870+1GB+Video+Card

I think you hold to budget





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Jumat, 21 Maret 2014

WHY DOES MY COMPUTER CRASH WHENEVER I OPEN AN MMO GaME?

Q. it used to be so fast it wasn't like this before
i have already been playing this for almost 2 years this is the first time it happened

components are brand new

AMD Athlon XP 2500+ 1.83 GHz, 512 MB of RAM

please help me

A. Have you checked your temperatures ? If not, you should.

If you've played these games before without any problems then there should be no reason why you cant play them right now as long as you're playing the same games you have played before (since newer games = better hardware).

Try checking your computer for dust, an overheated computer can cause games to slow down and not work as smooth as they once used to.

If dust overheating you computer isn't the problem then the best advice I can give you is to pop in your windows CD and start all over even though I doubt you'd like this idea. Another thing you can do is upgrade your hardware since what was good hardware for MMO's 2 years ago is trash now.

Goodluck!.


How exactly are MMO computer games made?
Q. I know all about c++ and java applet programs. But lets use a java applet for example. How do they actualy make the game( the characters the items the quests etc.). It seems like a computer language couldn't do all that is it possible they use a program. See www.Runescape.com for an example.
When I say I know what C++ and java applets are I'm saying I know c++ is a computer language and a java applet is what the game comes up on. When I use Runescape as an example I mean how can you type a code from c++ and make what you see on the computer move. How are the graphics created and put into the code to make it work togther. Ex. a character moving across the screen.

A. There are a few different approaches to developing MMO games. Places like iwin.com, etc use flash and java applets. Whether or not they use some time of engine they purchased a license for, I don't know. Gunbound, Maple Story, and a few other RPGs have purchased a license to an engine that costs roughly $100,000.

Making the game is just basic code and the idea to develop a game infrastructure that is open-ended and very scalable. Being able to handle thousands of users requires a series of server farms (to share network load) and an internet backbone (T1, T3, OC-3) that will provide a pipe big enough to handle all the transactions that happen every second. Sometimes this requires multiple backbones.

I am not really sure what you mean that computer language couldn't do all that is possible but they would use a program. Computers only understand computer language and programs are built from a particular computer language. XBOX 360 games are built using XNA or a derivative of C# (.NET). Many games in the past (and now) are built from C++ and DirectX. The possibilities are endless but game development is more than just code. It is the methodology, the infrastructure, and the community.





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Kamis, 20 Maret 2014

Can you name some computer gaming companies?

Q. the person with the most gaming companies wins
producers pls

A. Activision
Makers of Mechwarrior and more.
All-Game
An interesting site attempting to cover all console and computer games past, present, and future.
Avalon Hill Games
R.I.P. Bought by Hasbro AH will never return as we all knew it. The site currently only has support for AH computer games. Keep an eye out for more.
Battlecruiser 3000
Home to the infamous Battlecruiser Sci-FI sim.
Battlefront.com
Makers of the unique Combat Mission WW2 tactical computer game. They also have some excellent AFV lithographs for sale.
Cavedog Entertainment
Home of the makers of Total Annihilation. Free units and lots more support.
CH Products
Home of CH Products, makers of some of the best game peripherals.
Computer Games
Computer Games magazine (formerly CG Strategy Plus Magazine). They post most of their print articles.
Electronic Arts
Jane's and Origins.
Electronics Boutique
Online site for EB a software retailer.
GamesSpot
A great gaming site for the computer gamer. Lots of reviews and discussions.
Grognard Simulations Inc.
A new computer game developer. They are working on a WW2 operational level wargame.
Happy Puppy
One of the earliest game sites on the Web. Happy Puppy now is very expansive and thus generic in its coverage.
HPS Simulations
Home of HPS Simulations, the makers of the Tigers on the Prowl series of games and Aide de Camp, the great board game to computer program.
Incredible Simulations Games
ISG homepage. Makers of the Medieval, Zulu War, Custer's Last Command, and Defend the Alamo! A nice looking site with a recommended reading list.
Jane's Combat Simulations
Home of the makers of F-15, Longbow 2, and 688(I).
Lucas Arts
All things Star Wars. A great site.
Mare Crisium Studios
Makers of Stars! Supernova, a great galaxy conquest game.
Microprose
Makers of X-Com, MOO2, and many other fine computer games.
Microsoft
Like we need to say something.
Panzer Elite
An interesting site by a company producing a new WW2 platoon level armor combat game.
PC Gamer Online
Home of PC Gamer magazine. Mostly general stuff but a few tidbits of interest here for the computer gamer.
ProSIM
A new computer game developer. Their current title is BCT (Brigade Combat Team) a modern tactical combat simulation game in the spirit of TacOps.
Schwerpunkt
A great little company making serious computer wargames. Not state of the art but very fun.
Sean O'Connor's Windows Games
Sean has made a great CC clone called Firefight. Check it out!
Shrapnel Games
Home of Shrapnel Games, makers of Steel Beasts and other unique wargames.
Sierra Games
Makers of Indy Car Racing, NASCAR, and Red Baron 2.
Star Trek: Star Fleet Command
Home of Quicksilver Software's upcoming Star Fleet Battles computer game. Based on the rules of the SFB board game. Looks great.
Starships Unlimited
A new sci-fi galaxy conquest game with a twist.
Strategy Gaming Online
Another general gaming site. Covers all gaming genres. Has reviews, patches, downloads and more.
Talonsoft
Makers of fine computer wargames including their Battleground series, East Front, and the great The Operational Art of War.
Warpigs
A strategic space game.
WarZone Online Gaming Magazine
A new Web-based gaming magazine similar to OGR.
Westwood
Makers of Command & Conquer and Tiberian Sun.
Westwood Underground
This site is a bit slow but still a great resource for Westwood games.


Which is the best Computer Gaming Company?
Q. First off, DO NOT RECOMMEND OR SUGGEST ME BUILDING MY OWN PC. I DO NOT WANT TO.

OK, now that was said, which is the best company to buy from? Digital Storm, Maingear, Alienware, Velocity Micro, Stealth Machines or Origin PC?

PS if you do not know any of these companies, Google them. Thanks

A. I absolutely love it when people suggest Alienware, because it proves they don't know anything about computer companies. And are just trying to get free points with a half-assed answer.

Alienware customer support is absolutely terrible, know why? They are run and owned by Dell. Dell customer support is most nine times out of ten terrible.

DO NOT go with Alienware, IBuyPower, CyberPowerPC, or Widow PC. Period.

The ONLY company's I would buy a gaming computer from are Falcon-Northwest (www.falcon-nw.com), and Maingear (www.maingear.com)

Reasons? Their craftmanship is outstanding, they build their computers from the heart. (corny, I know). They treat customers problems(if they even have any) as if it was their own problem, and will go out of their way to fix it. If you have a problem and call their company, an actual TECHNICIAN will answer the phone. Someone who builds computers for the company will answer the phone. They also stress test your machine before shipping it and benchmark it to make sure it runs perfect. The final reason is they only use the best computer components in their machine. Nothing is reused.

I haven't done much research on Digital Storm, but from what I've read and seen their machines are top of the line also, and their customer support is great as well.





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Computer Specs for PC games.?

Q. Hey everyone
Im not tech savy at all but I need to buy a computer to play PC games and was wondering if this computer's specs are good enough to play games like Crysis 3, sims 3, battlefield games like that. Also if it's a good computer all around. It's about 950 online, is it worth it or is there anything that I could get thats better.Thanks alot



Operating System:

Windows 8

Processor:

3.6GHz AMD A6-5400K dual-core accelerated processor unit (APU)

Memory:

6GB DDR3 (expandable to 16GB)

Hard Drive:

1.5TB SATA 7200RPM

Optical Drive:

Slim-tray DVD SuperMulti burner
Supports 8X DVD±R/RW, 24X CD±R/RW

Media Card Reader:

6-in-1 reader supports Secure Digital (SD, SDHC), MultiMediaCard (MMC), Memory Stick (MS, MS PRO) and xD Picture Card

LCD Monitor:

23" full high-definition widescreen LCD
1920 x 1080 resolution

Additional Specs

Graphics:

AMD Radeon HD 7540D
Up to 3045MB total available graphics memory

Cache Memory:

1MB L2 cache

Sound System:

Integrated stereo speakers
Built-in microphone

Wireless Network Adapter:

802.11b/g/n
Bluetooth 4.0

Network Adapter:

10/100/1000 Ethernet LAN

Keyboard/Pointing Device:

Wireless keyboard with volume control
Wireless optical mouse

Ports:

(2) USB 3.0
(5) USB 2.0 (1 for wireless dongle)
(1) Headphone/microphone
(1) Line out
(1) Subwoofer out
(1) RJ-45 LAN

Power Source:

AC power supply


PS. its a HP Envy all-in-one

A. This computer uses laptop parts. I would recommend buying a gaming computer and having someone custom build it. The computer you have listed will struggle in terms of graphics with BF3 and Crysis 3. You'd be much better off with a computer build such as:

Intel Core i5-3570K Processor: http://goo.gl/0CHRy

Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO CPU Cooler: http://goo.gl/bcL1n

Gigabyte Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 Graphics Card: http://goo.gl/g6sxm

Gigabyte GA-Z77X-UD3H Motherboard: http://goo.gl/y2XbP

8GB Samsung DDR3 1600MHz RAM: http://goo.gl/gzb9m

128GB Samsung 840 Series SSD: http://goo.gl/sbAuN

1TB Western Digital Caviar Black Hard Drive: http://goo.gl/JqijZ

600W Corsair CX600 Power Supply: http://goo.gl/Rtx2w

Corsair Carbide 300R Case: http://goo.gl/up2vs

Sony DVD Burner: http://goo.gl/2vy1a


Computer games on PC?
Q. I will be building a PC soon and am currently deciding what specifications to use for it. I am aware of function creep on these sorts of things. Basically wondering how big the gaming scene is on PCs? Don't most people use consoles (X-box,PS3,WII etc) for that sort of thing? Is it worth me at the start putting in gaming quality parts?

A. If you're a Microsoft junkie, a lot of the better selling games they've made for both the PC and the 360. A few of them (especially the strategy games) are actually more fun to play on the PC. It's true that the computer scene isn't as big as the console scene as far as gaming goes, but if you're even the most casual of a gamer, it doesn't hurt to spice up the computer... most "gaming upgrades" help your computer perform outside of games too (3D rendering, etc).

If you're not planning on dishing out money for a console, I'd say just deck out the computer to work with it. Who knows.. in a few years, they'll probably have 360/PS3/Wii emulators and you can just play those games on your computer anyway :P





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Selasa, 18 Maret 2014

Building a gaming computer! Spec tips? (please help)?

Q. Im building a gaming computer because i have an ACER laptop which actually does handle games decently with minor lag.(games like-TF2, Minecraft,Garry's Mod, Arctic Combat and thats really all i know..)What would you say the The actuall specs are for playing games like Battle Field 3 and games like ARMA 2 and ARMA 3. i need to know because developers of games always say that you need a high tech NVidea to play Minecraft, but my Intel integrated sh*t, handles it just fine.
I just want to know what specs you guys would recomend. If not specs a gaming laptop that hanles all games fairly well for a cheap cost.(i prefer gaming laptops rather than desktops)
My acer specs just in case you happen to need them-
Intel Cleron processor 900
Intel GMA 4500M
3GB DDR3 Memory(RAM)
250 GB HDD(164 remaining)
4-cell Li-ion battery
Acer Nplify802.11 b/g/n (whatever the hell that is)

A. I wouldent get a gaming laptop but a decent gaming computer could handle those games well


Computer Gaming Spec. Help?
Q. I want to upgrade my computer so I can play Minecraft with a 64x resolution texture pack, and record Minecraft videos with Bandicam. I have 4GB RAM, I have an Intel Pentium Dual processor, 64 bit OS, and I don't quite know the processor, I know it is not a gaming kind for sure though. What should I upgrade to do what I need it for? And HOW do I install it? I want my price rate to be under at least $500.

A. Is your computer a generic/custom unit or a brand-name unit from Dell, HP, Acer etc? Is it a regular tower or a smaller slimline model? If it''s a brand-name computer what's the exact model number?

You'll probably only need to upgrade two things (your graphics card and power supply) but it's possible you'll need to upgrade the CPU as well. Minecraft doesn't have high hardware requirements.

The first step will be finding out exactly what you've got now. Download one of the free utilities to find out your computer's details, including the motherboard model. I recommend either SIW or CPU-Z which are available on download.com:

http://download.cnet.com/SIW-Portable/3000-2094_4-75449686.html?tag=mncol;2
http://download.cnet.com/CPU-Z/3000-2086_4-10050423.html?tag=mncol;1

Either of those will identify your current CPU and motherboard model. Post that information, then we'll know whether your current CPU is fine for Minecraft + recording. We'll also know what type of graphics cards your computer can accept (although in all likelihood it will be PCI-Express).

To find out your computer's power supply capacity you'll have to remove the cover and look at what's printed on the power supply label. If it's less than 300 watts, you'll want to replace it.

The minimum graphics card upgrade I'd recommend is a Radeon HD 6670. And for $20 more, you can get the Radeon HD 7750 or 6770.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814121442
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814102969
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814121474

The 6670 and 7750 both run fine on a stock 300 watt power supply. But to install the 6770 your computer needs a 450W or higher power supply. So you'd need a new PSU in addition to the card:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817371045
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817371030

We'll need to know the specifics of your current CPU & motherboard model before we can suggest any CPU upgrades (if that's even required). Different motherboards can accept different models.

For games, 4Gb of RAM is plenty. 8GB helps for heavy multitasking and makes your system future-proof, but not even the highest-end games like Battlefield 3 and Metro 2033 use more than 4GB of RAM. Applications which require 8GB or more are video editing software like Sony Vegas and design/rendering programs like AutoCad, Maya and 3D Studio Max- not games.





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Playing Xbox 360 Games on a computer monitor?

Q. Hey guys, first of all, it is possible to play and xbox 360 on a computer monitor right? And can you please tell me which monitor would be the best, including crisp clear graphics, and around 100-150 dollars? Thank you very much.

A. I use Dell ST2010 for my xbox 360. It's a little small, but then I sit really close to it.
There is a wire that connects XBOX 360 directly to monitor VGA port, with RCA audio out ports.
all you have to do is go out and buy that cable and get RCA to 3.5mm adapter and coupler to get sound.
Don't get HDMI for the monitor, as most monitors dont have built-in sound, even if they do,
it is very poor quality and nothing you would want to hear out of HD game system.


Can I play xbox 360 on my computer monitor?
Q. I have a Gateway FPD1975W TFT LCD Monitor, And I have a VGA port? I think in the back of my monitor, I have 2, One to the computer and one left alone, Im wondering if I get the xbox 360 VGA HD cable, if I plug it into the VGA port and go to the right input, Can i play it on my monitor?
I have a VGA cable that connects my monitor to my PC and a DVI. What if I buy a HDMI to DVI cable, Since my xbox have a HDMI thing to plug into

A. Yes, with a couple of restrictions:

1. For most monitors, you will not be able to see the Xbox dashboard because it is in a display mode (480i) that computer monitors cannot handle through their VGA connector.

2. For most monitors, you will not be able to play DVD�s, because DVD playback on the Xbox is also in 480i.

The following methods can be used to connect your Xbox to your monitor:

METHOD 1 (Restrictions noted above apply): Use the high-definition A/V pack and a component-to-RGB adapter like the model 9A62 from Audio Authority. This will provide high-definition gaming, at the expense of the Xbox dashboard and DVD playback, as noted above.

METHOD 2: If your computer�s video card (or your monitor) supports S-Video or composite video IN, you can hook the Xbox�s output to the computer�s (or monitor�s) input. Note that you will lose the ability to display high-resolution images with this setup (you are limited, more or less, to NTSC resolution, or approximately 640�480 interlaced). But you retain the ability to see the Xbox dashboard and to play DVDs.

METHOD 3: Use an aftermarket Xbox adapter product like the Redant VGA converter box. This product also limits you to NTSC resolution like method 2.

Note: There are third-party products advertised as providing full 480p VGA output. you can try searching on google for some of those.

METHOD 4: Send the Xbox video into a video capture card on your PC. This will limit your resolution and might make it difficult to get the Dolby Digital audio decoded, if you have a sound card that is DD capable.





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Gaming desktop computer?

Q. i want to know what i would need to build a gaming DESKTOP computer under $700. i am really new to this kind of stuff. i am a console gamer, but i find it too easy and want more of a challenge. i know somewhat of the things i would need. such as a video card, motherboard, RAM, etc. but i am not sure what will give me the best performance for the money i am using. i will be looking to upgrade it later on in the future with faster and better performing things. but i really dont know what some of the things are used for. for example, what is the motherboard for, and why that one and not another. and if they are campatible with the other parts of the computer. also i want all performance, not really for the looks. so cheap affordable case would be nice that would last me a decent amount of time. ive also been doing research but there are a lot of mixed reviews about everything, and to a new guy like me, all these letters and numbers are confusing, so some explaination to some of the meanings of things that the parts have, would be very helpful, or if i could get a website where they give a good explaination about everything. i have read a few but they mostly just say what the item is and how much , but they dont explain how this could be better than any other part of the same price range and performance. i also will be mostly playing games such as battlefield, cod, halo (if it comes to pc), minecraft, runescape, skyrim etc. thank you so much, i am asking for a lot, i might as well ask if someone could build it for me. thanks!
also, i would even get the alienware x51, but i have a strong feeling that is might mostly be a rip off and not worth the money at all, all looks and no performance, but knowing if its any good would be great!

A. I checked Ironside. No bargain there.

A gaming computer is:
Case, Motherboard, Keyboard, Mouse, Power supply, CPU, Graphics card, cooling fans, DRAM, Operating system, Optical drive, HDD[s], audio output (speakers or headset), monitor/display or TV.
Gaming is mostly in the Graphics card.
Most show here:
http://www.videocardbenchmark.net/gpu_list.php
and the CPU is on the first tab.
Gaming summary, is matching the nearest benchmarked card to this:
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Computer-Games-on-Laptop-Graphic-Cards.13849.0.html
$720 gets this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883227422
$700 gets this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883227408
AMD FX-8120 3.1GHz is a bit of a waste because it has more cores than gaming can use, but it is OK. If building your own, FX-4100 is good enough and then try to unlock and overclock.
HDD is 1TB SATA II - would prefer Sata III
Has a decent AMD Radeon HD 6850 1GB
is a cheaper motherboard with Fast (10/100) ethernet instead of gigabit, 6 channel audio instead of 8.
The HD 7750 of the one costing $20 more is a lower grade graphics card. 5 channel audio and gigabit ethernet. I would get the $700 one first.

The Alienware X51 is next to impossible to upgrade because the case is too small.
The $700 and tax
2nd Generation Intel® Core� i3-2120 (3M Cache, 3.3 GHz) is no better than the newegg CPUs and probably a little lower in actual gaming. 1GB GDDR5 NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 545 is much lower than the HD 7750, and that is lower than the HD 6850. HDD is still SATA II they throw in a $25 wireless card. and use a $15 power supply 240W External Power
It is a P.O.S.
Not as good as a $530 one at Newegg.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883229285
A HD 6670 approximates GT 545
FX-4100 approximates Intel i3-2120
The PSU is better, includes a keyboard + mouse, and just a smaller HDD. The Alienware is worth $575 not $700
The HD 6670 is probably not strong enough for you. See the chart of gaming. It is about a GT 555M equal. You can build your own, but the $700 Cyberpower is made with about $650 worth of parts.
On Build your own, use HD 6850 or HD 6870 or HD 7770 or GTX 560 ti
Use an FX-4100 or i3-2120 or so
Find a decent 650Watt power supply
You pretty much match the $700 system with tweaking the numbers.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ComboBundleDetails.aspx?ItemList=Combo.1018125
This kit at about $600 or so, is missing Windows 7 and only has the 128GB SSD, but is about right overall.
This one also
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ComboBundleDetails.aspx?ItemList=Combo.1018122
needs windows 7 and eventually a second HDD but is about right.


which computer for gaming is better from this website?
Q. Im going to buy a computer from best buy and they must have added more computers. Im trying to get the gateway laptop, but theres alot to choose. I might put alot of games and mostly for gaming and internet. dont pick from the other websites just this best buy web.

A. their computers are good but for gaming it sucks. try dell or alien ware. alien ware has awesome gaming computers but a little pricey





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Computer for gaming.?

Q. I have about 1200$. What type of computer can I get that will run new games like BIOSHOCK or Orange Box smoothly? I know I want at least 3 gigs of ram, or else enough money to spare to upgrade it.
Thanks

A. I think $1200 is not enough. I recommend you build your own.

High End Gaming Computer
$75 Case: ATX Mid Tower
$110 Power supply 650 watt or larger, SLI certified a plus
$180 Motherboard ATX; LGA 775 ; 2 PCI express x16 slots
$280 Core 2 Quad Q6600
$140 4 GB Dual Channel 800Mhz RAM
$249 Nvidia 8800GTS (1 ea,)
$35 CD/DVD 20x Burner
$120 500 GB SATA II Hard Drive
$180 Vista Ultimate OEM
=================
$1369 USD Prices per new egg.com

Substitute Core 2 Duo E6550 2333 MHz $157 for Core 2 Quad Q6600 $280
$280-$157 =$123

$1369-$123 = $1246

Substitute 8600GTS for 8800GTS
$270-$133= $137

$1246 - $137 = $1109

Optional:
Prices per new egg.com
$45 Logitech MX518 or Logitech G5
$58 Logitech G15 Gaming Keyboard
$270 SAMSUNG 226BW Black 22" 2 ms
Widescreen LCD Monitor

$90 Logitech THX Z-5300e 280 Watts RMS 5.1 Speaker
http://www.google.com/products?q=Logitech+THX+Z-5300e&scoring=p
======================
My opinion for a new computer processor to run Vista:
For non gaming a Rendering Time of 1:59 or less
For gaming a Rendering Time of 1:33 or less (1.20 or less preferred)
Refer to:
http://www23.tomshardware.com/cpu_2007.html
===============================
Rendering time, lower number is faster per
http://www23.tomshardware.com/cpu_2007.html
Core 2 Duo E4300 1800 MHz $129.99
Rendering time = 1:54
AMD Athlon 64 X2 Processor 6000+ $159.99
Rendering time = 1:27
Core 2 Duo E6550 2333 MHz $157.39
Rendering time = 1:27
Core 2 Duo E6750 2666 MHz $175.39
Rendering time = 1:17
Core 2 Duo E6850 3000 MHz $279.99
Rendering time = 1:09
Core 2 Quad Q6600 $279.99
Rendering time = 0:47
Core 2 Extreme QX6850 $1034.99
Rendering time = 0:39

Prices per newegg.com
I recommend you use a Core 2 Duo or Core 2 Quad CPU
========================
Motherboard
ATX (not ATX micro)
775 socket will take Core 2 Duo, Core 2 Quad, Core2 Extreme
Maximum RAM 8GB or more
1000 MHz or faster FSB
2PCI express X16 slots
(careful some cheap ones are only X8 internally)
8 channel audio
5 star rating and at least 10 reviews.

this leaves 3 choices
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010200280+1070509908+1073607588+1075707618+1074007596&Configurator=&Subcategory=280&description=&Ntk=&srchInDesc=
======================
My opinion for a new video card:
For playing the latest advanced games a FRAPS (frames per second) of 50 or higher (80 or higher ideal)
For moderate games a FRAPS of 30 or more.
For simple games or no games a FRAPS of 18 or more
Refer to:
http://www23.tomshardware.com/graphics.html
===============================
FRAPS (frames per second); higher is better per
http://www23.tomshardware.com/graphics.html

NVIDIA 8600GTS ($133) FRAPS= 53.6
http://www.evga.com/products/moreinfo.asp?pn=256-P2-N761-AR&pwindow=specs&family=23
400 Watt Minimum; 22 Amps minimum @ 12V rail

ATI Radeon HD 2900 PRO($280) FRAPS= 88.1 estimated
http://download.hightech.com.hk/manual/HD2900/radeon_hd2900_users_guide_2nded_137-41328-20.pdf
A 550 Watt or better power supply with two 2�3-pin PCIe� power connectors.

NVIDIA 8800GTS ($269) FRAPS=102.2
http://www.evga.com/products/moreinfo.asp?pn=640-P2-N825-AR&family=23
400 Watt Minimum; 26 Amps minimum @ 12V rail .

ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT ($375) FRAPS = 108.6
http://download.hightech.com.hk/manual/HD2900/radeon_hd2900_users_guide_2nded_137-41328-20.pdf
A 550 Watt or better power supply with two 2�3-pin PCIe� power connectors.

NVIDIA 8800Ultra ($549) FRAPS=116.9
http://www.evga.com/products/moreinfo.asp?pn=768-P2-N888-AR&family=23
500 Watt Minimum; 34 Amps minimum @ 12V rail .
Two available 6-pin Molex hard drive power dongles.

All support DirectX 10

Prices per
http://www.newegg.com
=============
Graphics card gaming performance charts:
http://www23.tomshardware.com/graphics.html
http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=399&type=expert&pid=1
http://www.fudzilla.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1595&Itemid=40&limit=1&limitstart=2
Mobile Graphics Cards - Benchmark List
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Mobile-Graphics-Cards-Benchmark-List.844.0.html
=================
CPU gaming performance charts:
http://www23.tomshardware.com/cpu_2007.html

CPU Benchmarks
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/index.php
==================
Higher performance video cards require more current from the 12 volt leg of the power supply that supplies the video card. This may require changing to a more powerful power supply. Determine the amps at 12 Volts the video card recommends and compare it to your existing power supply.

How to Buy a Power Supply
http://www.wikihow.com/Buy-a-Power-Supply
Nvidia SLI Certified Power Supplies
http://www.slizone.com/object/slizone_build_psu.html
EVGA Approved Power Supplies
http://www.evga.com/articles/286.asp
ATI Radeon Crossfire Certified Power Supplies
http://ati.amd.com/technology/crossfire/buildyourown2.html
Diamond Video Cards Certified Power Supplies
http://www.diamondmm.com/certified.php
--------------------------------------
RAM
Changing from 800 MHz Dual Channel RAM to 1244 MHz Dual Channel Ram only increased performance 2%.
A 50+% increase in RAM speed only increased performance 2%.
http://www.tomshardware.com/2007/06/15/hardcore_ddr2_ram_by_corsair/page16.html


GAMING COMputer??????
Q. ok so i have 1823$ to spend on a gaming computer
im just not sure what parts to get i have a dvd rom dont need one and i have vista and xp so dont need a os either

my friend says he will build it for me i just need to pick out the parts and he says newegg.com is the best

could u guys help me pick parts out from newegg.com for
1823$ including shipping and handling zip code is 79934

this would be really really apriciated thanks
free 10 points
sorry ima nvidia man and intel being that they're the best for now we'll see in a week or two when the 4870s i think are coming out

A. Hello, your friend is right about newegg if you live in the US. I assume you do even without checking the zip code.

First question, do you need a case, monitor, keyboard, mouse, speakers,etc. ? Everything except dvd rom?

I would get these and I'll explain why below (Without the above):

1. Quad-core AMD, crossfirex ATI, AMD chipset, this is a spider platfrom motherboard =

MSI K9A2 Platinum AM2+/AM2 AMD 790FX ATX AMD Motherboard - Retail

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130136

2. Quad-core 2.5 ghz processor =

AMD Phenom 9850 BLACK EDITION 2.5GHz 4 x 512KB L2 Cache 2MB L3 Cache Socket AM2+ 125W Quad-Core Processor - Retail

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103249

3. HyperX ram, Kingston, High Quality and fast.

Kingston HyperX 4GB (4 x 1GB) 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 1066 (PC2 8500) Quad Kit Desktop Memory - Retail

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820134596

4. ATI Crossfire card, one of the best on the market

SAPPHIRE 100221SR Radeon HD 3870 X2 1GB (512MB x 2) 256-bit GDDR3 PCI Express x16 HDCP Ready CrossFire Supported Video Card - Retail

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814102723

5. Western Digital (Get 1-2 maybe...)

Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD6400AAKS 640GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s Hard Drive - OEM

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822136218

6. Thermaltake power supply, 750 watts, 80%+ eff. CrossfireX AMD supported

Thermaltake W0116RU 750W Complies with ATX 12V 2.2 & EPS 12V version Power Supply 100 - 240 V CE, CB, TUV, FCC, UL, CUL, and BSMI certified - Retail

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817153038

===============================================

Right now at $$1,224.94 without tax or shipping. This includes two hard drives. Now some people will tell you otherwise. I have been building computers for 15 years.

I choose quad-core amd, ati video, and amd chipset board so you can get the spider platform. All stuff is faster together. Also the motherboard supports crossfireX which you can always get another ATI HD 3870 X2 if you want. Also the motherboard can be upgrade with a 3.0 ghz processor later. And 4 gigs of HyperX ram is plenty. I didn't go with a 1TB hard drive because massive hard drives have bad quality control right. Plus I went Western Digital because most of the other hard drive brands have much higher failure rates. Thermaltake 750 watt because 750 will be enough, and the powersupply is over 80% efficent and thermaltake has nice no extra cost warranty on their products.

If you need otherstuff, I suggest a new case, I would have to adjust the other stuff a little. Please respond if you need monitor, case, keyboard, speakers, etc....

Suggestion: Being that you don't know what's good and you think Intel and Nvidia are the best, you better cough up more dough. Those computer specs are hard to beat for the money. You would need at least 2500+... I would suggest this case if you are a hardcore gamer...

LIAN LI PC-P80 Black Aluminum ATX Full Tower Computer Case - Retail

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811112159

But you can only get that if your going for the AMD ATI stuff... plus the newest video cards out for Nvidia are not SLI supported. I hope their next set is.

This link has a youtube video review for the case. It's worth watching even if you don't want the case.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWaEp408lgE





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Senin, 17 Maret 2014

Would this be a good gaming computer?

Q. This is a mid-2012 retina MacBook Pro
A 2560x1600 retina display
2.4GHz Quad-core Intel Core i7, Turbo Boost up to 3.4GHz
16GB 1600MHz DDR3L SDRAM
256GB Flash Storage
Would this handle games like the sims 3 and various games from Steam okay?
Thanks!
Oops the graphics are a GT 650M w/ 1 GB GDDR5

A. Depends on which computer you bought....
All recent Macs will run Sims 3. That isn't a demanding game. For those big-time shooting games...
the 15" is fine (dual graphics). The 13" is not (only has integrated Intel graphics).

An Apple computer is specially designed for...
-- faster startup (EFI firmware)
-- long life (aluminum case)
-- best rendering of video in iMovie or Final Cut Pro (Firewire 800)
-- and fast copying of files to an external drive (Thunderbolt)

If none of that is important to you, buy a big tin box PC. They are cheap because they do not have any expensive hardware.


Football Manager 2012 problem..?
Q. I have recently downloaded Football Manager 2012.The game is working as the way it should,no problems...But,when i exit the game and go to my desktop,an error message comes out "Football Manager 2012 stopped working..." and something like "...fm.exe crashed".I have no problem when i open the game next time,but in 95% cases this error message comes out.Should i ignore this and continue playing or do something else?If you have a solution for my problem,please help me.

A. I also faced such problem but u should ignore this unless your computer hang when u exit the game.





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Would this computer setup be good enough for photo editing?

Q. I decided to build a new pc to upgrade from my amd athlon64 x2 with 3gb ram. I got a great deal on a GIGABYTE GA-78LMT-S2P AMD 760 Motherboard with an Athlon ii x3 3.1ghz processor and 8gb 1333mhz ram and a 1gb ati hd6451 vid card. After I bought it, I noticed that processors have gone down in price. I'm not a big gamer, the main purpose would be to run photoshop and to play civ4 and the everyday stuff. Would the system I bought be enough or would I have buyers regret and should I go to my local store and pick up an Athlon ii x4 or phenom ii x4. Need to keep the processor under $140. Do you guys think I'd be satisfied with 3 cores considering what I'm upgrading from and that I'm not a gamer?

A. For photo editing I prefer to quad core, and minimum 8 GB of RAM.... You has to have a nice GPU too... Lik e HD 7870 / GTX 660ti...

Hope it helps... :))


Good build for photo editing computer?
Q. I have a 1000 dollar budget, and want to build a PC that can handle photo editing, and maybe minor video editing. There will be absolutely no gaming done on this computer. I will want dual monitors set up, so I think that means integrated graphics is a no, just not sure how good of a GPU to get. I would like to stick to intel processors, and for the GPU, I have no preference.

I'm thinking a haswell i5, but I'm not sure if I should go i7 or not.
will be at least 16gb ram
Other than that, I'm just not sure what to get. I've only built gaming rigs before, so this is kinda new to me as what needs to be powerful and what doesn't. Thanks

A. The i5 will do great in photo editing. When it comes to Video editing, if you were doing intense video editing, for an example doing 10 to 20 projects a day, yes the i7 will be more beneficial to you because you will be able to complete the tasks alot faster because of Hyper-threading technology, if you have deadlines. For someone that does video on a minor basis in my opinion the i5's do really well in video rendering.

So it's up to you on how much you do video editing but me personally, if your on a budget I would rather put the extra $100 I would spend on the i7 and put that towards the GPU or more storage space to hold all the videos you might be doing.

Hope this helped you,

ericlee30

~Member Of The Intel Response Squad~





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Minggu, 16 Maret 2014

how much would it cost to build from scratch a computer that would be used for the internet and possibly games?

Q. i want a computer that can handle windows 7 x64 bit with around 500GB for hard drive or higher,if possible,with a large amount of RAM(i have no idea what RAM is measured by or what a realistic amount would be)a high quality motherboard and graphics card,a fast processor,and the best of everything basically.any price ranges?
i want the VERY BEST.i do not care if costs thousands.tell me what the best is and what it will cost.

A. It depends on what games you want to play.
Any computer, new or old, in the past 10 years can use the internet without a hitch.
A computer capable of using the internet and playing casual online games will cost very little and is better bought from manufacturers such as Dell or Hp as they offer better prices for that price range. Building one of those will take maybe 300-400 dollars, similiar to the price of a branded computer. They will easily be aable to use the internet and play casual games such as world of warcraft and minecraft. (Would reccomend 3-4 gigs of ram, a low or mid end intel i3 or pentium processor, a decent size HDD, a intel-compatible motherboard, a sub-500 watt psu, and a cheap but sturdy case.)

On the other hand, high end gaming computers designed to max out graphically intensive games such as Crysis2 and BF3 are more cost effective built, and will cost anywhere between 600 and 1000 dollars for budget builds. A pretty cost-effective build could be:
Case:$50
Motherboard$100
Processor:$120 (i3 2120 is the best deal on the market right now)
8Gb Ram:$40
Hard drive(500gb):$80
Cd drive:$20
Videocard:$170(I would highly reccomend a Gtx560 ti, unless a higher end card is in your price range)
Power supply unit:$50
Windows 7:$100
For a total of $730, not including shipping. This built is guaranteed to max out any game in the market, guaranteed.

Prices and reccomended parts are listed for both purposes. I would reccomend buying from Newegg unless you live in California like me, in which case I would reccomend tigerdirect because they dont charge sales tax in that state.


Will installing games on my computer slow down my internet?
Q. I downloaded a game called maple story from the internet.
I also I bought the Sim 2 and installed it as well.
I have another game i want to install called
Need for Speed Carbon. <--- (is it any good)
But i want to know if all these games
will slow my internet speed.
Or does that have to do with the modem?

A. 1. Maple story Is MMORG game meaning dat u play with other user over Internet. So ofcourse while game is running Its gonna use Internet brandwith slowing down net. But while u r not running game It wont hurt ur speed

2. Sims will have no effect on speed of net. but might Increase Window startup timing.
(2 All moron's who ans dis ques). No game reduces speed of computer. Just some increases time taken by ur window 2 boot)

3.NFS carbon is boring. Try Need for speed Most Wanted. 100 times better.

4.Lol. Modem has NO role in deciding ur net speed. It just code and decode information packets. What mainly deiced ur speed is brandwith alloted by us ISP





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Gaming computer build?

Q. Hi people. I was wanting a new gaming desktop to play WoW and Borderlands 2 on. Will this set up not Lag on Ultra on either of these games? I'm gtting this from cyberpowerpc. My buget is $1600. BASE_PRICE:[+759]

BLUETOOTH:None

CARE1:Ultra Enhanced Packaging Solution - Protect Your Dream System During Transit [+19]

CARE2:Cooler Master Thermal Fusion 400 Extreme Performance CPU - Thermal Compound Optimized for Thermal Dissipation [+10]

CARE3:Professional Wiring for All WIRING Inside The System Chassis - Minimize Cable Exposure, Maximize Airflow in Your System [+19]

CAS:Raidmax Agusta Mid-Tower Gaming Case w/ 1x USB 3.0 Port, Fan & LED Light Control (White/Black)

CASUPGRADE:None

CD:24X Double Layer Dual Format DVD+-R/+-RW + CD-R/RW Drive (BLACK COLOR)

CD2:None

COOLANT:Standard Coolant

CPU:AMD FX-6100 3.30 GHz Six-Core AM3+ CPU 6MB L2 Cache & Turbo Core Technology [+0]

CS_FAN:Maximum 120MM Color Case Cooling Fans for your selected case [+15] (Blue Color)

ENGRAVING:None

ENGRAVING_MSG:

FA_HDD:None

FAN:Asetek 510LC Liquid Cooling System 120MM Radiator & Fan (Enhanced Cooling Performance + Extreme Silent at 20dBA) (Single Standard 120MM Fan)

FLASHMEDIA:INTERNAL 12in1 Flash Media Reader/Writer (BLACK COLOR)

FREEBIE_MB:None

GLASSES:None

HDD:2TB (2TBx1) SATA-III 6.0Gb/s 64MB Cache 7200RPM HDD (Single Drive)

HDD2:500GB SATA-II 3.0Gb/s 16MB Cache 7200RPM HDD [+65] (Single Hard Drive)

IEEE_CARD:None

IUSB:Built-in USB 2.0 Ports

KEYBOARD:AZZA Multimedia USB Gaming Keyboard

MEMORY:16GB (8GBx2) DDR3/1333MHz Dual Channel Memory [+15] (Corsair or Major Brand)

MONITOR:19" Widescreen 1366x768 Sceptre X195W-NAGA 5ms TFT Active Matrix LCD Display LCD (Black Color) [+125]

MONITOR2:None

MONITOR3:None

MOTHERBOARD:[CrossFireX] ASUS M5A97 LE R2.0 AMD 970 Chipset CrossFireX Support DDR3 Socket AM3+ ATX w/ 7.1 Audio, GbLAN, USB3.0, SATA-III, RAID, 2 Gen2 PCIe X16, 2 PCIe X1 & 2 PCI (Pro OC Certified)

MOUSE:AZZA Optical 1600dpi Gaming Mouse with Weight Adjustable Cartridge

NETWORK:Onboard Gigabit LAN Network

OS:Microsoft® Windows 7 Home Premium [+104] (64-bit Edition)

OVERCLOCK:Pro OC (Performance Overclock 10% or more) [+19]

POWERSUPPLY:700 Watts - Standard Power Supply - SLI/CrossFireX Ready

RUSH:RUSH!!! READY TO SHIP IN NEXT BUSINESS DAY [+109]

SERVICE:STANDARD WARRANTY: 3-YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY PLUS LIFE-TIME TECHNICAL SUPPORT

SOUND:HIGH DEFINITION ON-BOARD 7.1 AUDIO

SPEAKERS:600Watts PMPO Subwoofer Stereo Speakers

TEMP:None

TVRC:None

USB:None

USBFLASH:None

USBHD:None

USBX:NZXT Internal USB 6-PORT Expansion Module [+19]

VIDEO:NVIDIA GeForce GTX 550 Ti 2GB 16X PCIe Video Card [+26] (Major Brand Powered by NVIDIA)

VIDEO2:NVIDIA GeForce GTX 550 Ti 1GB 16X PCIe Video Card [+115] (Major Brand Powered by NVIDIA)

VIDEO3:None

WNC:None

_PRICE:(+1419)

_view_:{071CDA45-8C3B-49E2-B6DC-82D02ADC96E0}

_load_:9/30/2012 3:07:21 AM

A. Yes, that configuration would play WoW and Borderlands 2 on ultra without lag.

But it's not the most cost-effective build for the money. You're burning money on things which don't improve performance and skimping in other areas you shouldn't.

First of all, dual GTX 550 Ti's is quite powerful. However, it's always better to have a single higher-end card than a pair of lesser cards running in SLI or Crossfire. SLI performance doesn't scale equally for all games. SLI/CF setups also experience more graphics driver glitches/bugs and also may run afoul of micro-stuttering. Instead of two GTX 550 Ti cards, you're better off with a single GTX 660, which can play top-end titles like BF3 on ultra at 1080p.

By the way, for WoW and Borderlands 2 on that 1366x768 monitor, even a single GTX 550 Ti is enough to run smoothly on ultra.

Second, AMD processors have weaker gaming performance than Intel. Core i5 is the best choice for gaming builds. Even Core i3 beats most AMD processors.

http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu/display/amd-fx-8120-6100-4100_6.html#sect0

Third, putting 16GB of RAM into a gaming rig is just wasting money. No games utilize more than 4GB of RAM. With 8GB you've got enough to keep your rig future-proof for the next 3-4 years. Gaming requires a high-end graphics

Fourth, you want a good quality power supply- something from a top brand like Corsair or Antec, not the generic one.

Finally, why do you have a secondary hard drive of 500GB? There's no reason for it... and unless you're storing a TON of videos and music, 2TB isn't needed for your main drive. A 1TB drive would be plenty. You might consider an SSD for super-fast boot times along with a 1TB secondary drive, but that's a degree of decadence you might not be interested in ;)

Instead of starting with the Mega Special I, start with the Mega Special III (base price $825)

I suggest taking the air cooling option - Cooler master Hyper 212 EVO rather than liquid cooling. That's fine even for moderate overclocking (which isn't necessary with a Core i5) and is basically zero maintenance.

Upgrade to the Corsair TX650 power supply and 2GB GTX 660 (which is currently a free upgrade from the GTX 560 Ti)

Keep the default Gigabyte GA-Z77-D3H motherboard and 8GB of 1600Mhz RAM... those are fine.

You can still chose the Raidmax Augusta case if you really like it... Otherwise the default Cooler Master HAF 912 is just as good and costs less.

Add 64-bit Windows 7, your Azza gaming keyboard and mouse, your 600W PMPO speakers (although I recommend at least getting the Creative T3130) and you're set.

You can choose their ultra care options, although they're pretty much a rip-off. The professional wiring option is pointless when you're running a single graphics card- there's PLENTY of space inside the case, no airflow problems. The ultra enhanced packaging is just some extra foam that won't really matter if the delivery guy tosses the box over a fence. Assuming it doesn't suffer some awful mishap, their standard packaging provides ample protection.

Even with the Thermal Fusion 400 compound and Professional wiring options, your total is $1207 before taxes/shipping, without monitor.

I advise AGAINST getting your monitor from CyberpowerPC, I don't really like their prices, or the models offered. Get that from Newegg or Amazon. For example, this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824113030

Or if you want a full 1080p monitor, this one:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824009316

So you spend less, for a better-performing system. Good luck!


help on gaming computer?
Q. so i been trying to find a computer online for gaming, i want it to be decent and cost arround $700, i dont care about the monitor i just want it to come witha keyboard and mouse, i been looking on for about 2 months now but still cant find one, one time i found one but its out of stock now, if it can run almost any recent game like bf3 or far cry 3, crysis 3 on ultra settings it would be great.i have been lookin in iBUYPOWER , NEWEGG, ETC. please someone help me! i really dont want to build one

A. ULTRA SETTINGS ON A $700 COMPUTER????
Good luck with that.....

Around $700 you are barely in the low budget gaming computer area....

Also, a gaming computer is NOT something you buy.
You either build it yourself or custom order from a reputable builder like AVA Direct, iBuyPower or CyberPowerPC

Here is the best low budget gaming PC you can build for around $750:

Yahoo answers will only allow up to 10 links, so I have to leave out the not so important components. Just copy paste in the search field on Newegg to find them, I will give the full name but no link for those.

BEST BUDGET GAMING DESKTOP PC BUILD FOR THE MONEY (under $750.00USD for the tower only)
Monitor, keyboard and mouse can add from $175 to over $500, depending on size and model you want.
All prices are in $USD and in the USA, current as of December 2012 and they might be slightly different one way or the other by now.
Also, some shipping charges may apply to some of the items.
Add your state sales tax if you reside in NJ, CA or TN - that's where Newegg has warehouses.
Look for similar parts on Amazon, Tiger Direct, etc if you want to avoid paying Uncle Sam.

FACT: INTEL IS A MUCH BETTER PROCESSOR FOR GAMING THAN ANY AMD.

Processor: Intel Core i3-3220 Ivy Bridge 3.3GHz LGA 1155 55W Dual-Core Desktop Processor - $119.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819116775
Motherboard: ASRock Z77 Pro3 LGA 1155 Intel Z77 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard - $94.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157297
After market CPU Cooler - Cooler Master Hyper EVO - $35.99 (Stock Intel cooler sucks and it's noisy too)
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16835103099
Memory (RAM): G.Skill Ripjaws X Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM 1600MHz - $39.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231428
Graphics Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 650 Ti 1GB 128-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 x16 - $149.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130838
Hard Drive: 500GB Seagate Barracuda SATA III (6.0Gb/s), 7200rpm - $59.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822148767
Optical Drive: LITE-ON DVD Burner - Bulk Black SATA Model iHAS124-04 - OEM - $17.99
Power Supply (PSU): CORSAIR Builder Series CX600 V2 600W ATX12V v2.3 80 PLUS Certified Active PFC Power Supply - $69.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817139028
PC Case (Tower): Rosewill CHALLENGER Black Gaming ATX Mid Tower Computer Case - $49.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811147153
Operating System (OS): Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64-bit OEM - $99.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16832116986

TOTAL: $747.90USD

Good luck with your build.

*****************
NOTES:
For only $10 more, you can get a better PC Case:
COOLER MASTER HAF 912 RC-912-KKN1 Black SECC/ ABS Plastic ATX Mid Tower Computer Case - $59.99
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811119233





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