Q. I need to know how much a good gaming computer will cost in Singapore,because my current one is only average.
Pentium(R) Dual Core Processor 2.93Ghz
Ram 2G(1.75G Usable)
NVIDIA Geforce 7050
Video Ram:889mb
Pixel shader 3.0
Pentium(R) Dual Core Processor 2.93Ghz
Ram 2G(1.75G Usable)
NVIDIA Geforce 7050
Video Ram:889mb
Pixel shader 3.0
A. build one, or upgrade yours, ur dual core 2.9 is ok, its not an i7 buts its ok, u need at least 4 gigs of ram, ur nvidea is a lil old or what? whats the 7050? hd? is it pci express?? whats games u play? get a PS3 for 300 bucks, slim, 120 gig, wallmsrt
What are some good specs i should use to build my own gaming computer for as cheap as possible?
Q. I am looking to build my own gaming computer but I don't know very much about computer building so I was wondering if anyone could give me some good specs to work with on a budget?
Thanks for any help
Thanks for any help
A. This depends on your budget...
Some good parts...
CPU:
- Intel Core i5 2500K is the best bang for buck, especially if you overclock.
- Intel Core i3 2100 is a good budget option but you cannot overclock for extra performance.
- AMD Phenom II X4 955 Black Edition is another good budget option, which you can overclock.
Motherboard:
- This depends on your CPU.
- AM3+ board for AMD, 1155 for Intel.
- Stick to brands Gigabyte, ASRock, ASUS, MSI for generally good boards
- See how much back ports, expansion slots, Crossfire/SLI support and determine if you need them.
- Get an ATX board (MATX boards are smaller and cheaper, usually not as good)
- Don't bother with excessive boards like the Rampage, Assassin, Sabertooth (unless you have a high budget)
Memory:
- Brands: G.Skill, Corsair, Mushkin, Kingston
- Do not get the ValueRAM/ValueSelect (or similar) ones.
- DDR3 1600MHz 2x4GB (8GB) is the sweet spot atm.
Case:
- Your choice
- Look at reviews on the net about them.
Power Supply:
- Check with a power supply calculator (google it), round up to nearest available wattage power supply there is.
- Brands: Enermax, Corsair, Seasonic, Silverstone.
- Do not skimp on this. You don't want to blow up your new computer because you got a cheap one, do you?
DVD:
- Anyone that is cheap is good. Bluray drives are more expensive.
Hard Drive:
- Check the price/GB
- Prices have gone up due to Thailand floods
- 3.5" 7200rpm, from Seagate, Samsung, Western Digital is a good idea.
Solid State Drive:
- Optional
- Decreases boot time, opening applications, loading stuff.
- Expensive
- Go for a 60-120GB model if you want this.
Graphics Card:
- Determine what games you play
- Check their website for the recommended (screw minimum) requirements.
- Check TomsHardware for their graphics card of the month articles.
- Pick one that suits your budget range.
Building a computer isn't too hard, plenty of guides in the internet.
Some good parts...
CPU:
- Intel Core i5 2500K is the best bang for buck, especially if you overclock.
- Intel Core i3 2100 is a good budget option but you cannot overclock for extra performance.
- AMD Phenom II X4 955 Black Edition is another good budget option, which you can overclock.
Motherboard:
- This depends on your CPU.
- AM3+ board for AMD, 1155 for Intel.
- Stick to brands Gigabyte, ASRock, ASUS, MSI for generally good boards
- See how much back ports, expansion slots, Crossfire/SLI support and determine if you need them.
- Get an ATX board (MATX boards are smaller and cheaper, usually not as good)
- Don't bother with excessive boards like the Rampage, Assassin, Sabertooth (unless you have a high budget)
Memory:
- Brands: G.Skill, Corsair, Mushkin, Kingston
- Do not get the ValueRAM/ValueSelect (or similar) ones.
- DDR3 1600MHz 2x4GB (8GB) is the sweet spot atm.
Case:
- Your choice
- Look at reviews on the net about them.
Power Supply:
- Check with a power supply calculator (google it), round up to nearest available wattage power supply there is.
- Brands: Enermax, Corsair, Seasonic, Silverstone.
- Do not skimp on this. You don't want to blow up your new computer because you got a cheap one, do you?
DVD:
- Anyone that is cheap is good. Bluray drives are more expensive.
Hard Drive:
- Check the price/GB
- Prices have gone up due to Thailand floods
- 3.5" 7200rpm, from Seagate, Samsung, Western Digital is a good idea.
Solid State Drive:
- Optional
- Decreases boot time, opening applications, loading stuff.
- Expensive
- Go for a 60-120GB model if you want this.
Graphics Card:
- Determine what games you play
- Check their website for the recommended (screw minimum) requirements.
- Check TomsHardware for their graphics card of the month articles.
- Pick one that suits your budget range.
Building a computer isn't too hard, plenty of guides in the internet.
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