Q. I am planing to build a gaming computer mainly because im tired of laptops. (i use laptops because im never in the same place for more than a week or two.) Im not trying to build the best of the best but im not trying to build a weak computer either. Im not planing to play games such has call of duty or battlefeild, im playing games like counter strike source, counter strike 1.6, and gta 4(but strong enough for cod 4). My max i would pay is 1k. I know how to put a computer together from scratch. I need help for parts that are good and are not super expensive. My biggest fear is that some parts wont work with each other or i might not have enough power and i would have wasted money. If anyone is a wiz with this kind of stuff please respond!
A. Your options are huge.
Start with a few useful sites:
http://pcpartpicker.com/parts/partlist/
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Computer-Games-on-Laptop-Graphic-Cards.13849.0.html
(Desktop+notebook+RESTRICT)
http://www.videocardbenchmark.net/gpu_list.php
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/gaming-cpu-review-overclock,3106-5.html
Part list consists of:
CPU, Motherboard, optional CPU cooler, optional sound card, optional wireless, DRAM, graphics, HDD, optional SSD, case, power supply, optical drive, monitor, keyboard, mouse, audio output device (headphone/headset/amplified speakers)
What does the $1000 goal maximum include out of the list?
Begin with the thought - do you want upgradability, or the best performance for the money. Do you want higher reliability and stability, or higher performance?
Then, do you want to reach a goal at lower cost, or do you want the highest performance at a price point? In other words, if $1000 can get you Battlefield-3 and Guild Wars 2 on high settings and all your games maxed out ultra, is that better than getting a good performing PC for $500?
PCPARTPICKER helps with shopping and compatibility. The overlooked item is the power supply, and it is the last item to select as being good enough to power all you choose.
Suppose you want the best bang for the buck.
AMD A10-5800K for $120 gets you included HD 7660D. That gets you a CPU running at 3nd gen i3 tier 2 level of gaming and graphics like HD 6570, and you can add an HD 6670 or 7670 which helps with a 1080p display and high graphics settings. (Dual graphics is what it is called. In some situations, the HD 6670 will do just as well or better than dual graphics).
But, in a cost efficient build, A10-5800K with built-in graphics is nice.
$120 CPU, $70 MB, $40 for 8GB 1600 1.5V ram, $50 1TB HDD at Newegg now, $50 case, $40 PSU, $20 DVDRW, HDMI to TV, $25 keyboard+mouse and you have your whole build for $415
and should play to minimum of NVIDIA GeForce GT 630M
Medium settings:
Call of Duty: Black Ops 2, Skyrim, GTA 4,
Low settings:
Guild Wars 2, BF3
High/ultra:
CoD: Modern Warfare 3, COD4, CS Source
You want to step up a notch, CPU i3-3225, HD 7750, Z75 or Z77 motherboard and fill in to fit.
Can you do i5-3570K and hd 7850 or more on $1000, yes, depending on what you need to include.
You can email me through Y/A or ask when you have a paper build.
Since your question is open and vague in a way, thought I would show that you can appx get what you want for $415. You can also spend more and get less. Wanna get serious about the goals?
Took the $982 http://pcpartpicker.com/p/nZq7
to $969 http://pcpartpicker.com/p/nZGp
better cpu, better motherboard with 8GB free DRAM, better graphics, swizzled the rest.
This can take a CPU upgrade of i5-3570K plus cooler, 2nd HD 7870 in SLI
Start with a few useful sites:
http://pcpartpicker.com/parts/partlist/
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Computer-Games-on-Laptop-Graphic-Cards.13849.0.html
(Desktop+notebook+RESTRICT)
http://www.videocardbenchmark.net/gpu_list.php
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/gaming-cpu-review-overclock,3106-5.html
Part list consists of:
CPU, Motherboard, optional CPU cooler, optional sound card, optional wireless, DRAM, graphics, HDD, optional SSD, case, power supply, optical drive, monitor, keyboard, mouse, audio output device (headphone/headset/amplified speakers)
What does the $1000 goal maximum include out of the list?
Begin with the thought - do you want upgradability, or the best performance for the money. Do you want higher reliability and stability, or higher performance?
Then, do you want to reach a goal at lower cost, or do you want the highest performance at a price point? In other words, if $1000 can get you Battlefield-3 and Guild Wars 2 on high settings and all your games maxed out ultra, is that better than getting a good performing PC for $500?
PCPARTPICKER helps with shopping and compatibility. The overlooked item is the power supply, and it is the last item to select as being good enough to power all you choose.
Suppose you want the best bang for the buck.
AMD A10-5800K for $120 gets you included HD 7660D. That gets you a CPU running at 3nd gen i3 tier 2 level of gaming and graphics like HD 6570, and you can add an HD 6670 or 7670 which helps with a 1080p display and high graphics settings. (Dual graphics is what it is called. In some situations, the HD 6670 will do just as well or better than dual graphics).
But, in a cost efficient build, A10-5800K with built-in graphics is nice.
$120 CPU, $70 MB, $40 for 8GB 1600 1.5V ram, $50 1TB HDD at Newegg now, $50 case, $40 PSU, $20 DVDRW, HDMI to TV, $25 keyboard+mouse and you have your whole build for $415
and should play to minimum of NVIDIA GeForce GT 630M
Medium settings:
Call of Duty: Black Ops 2, Skyrim, GTA 4,
Low settings:
Guild Wars 2, BF3
High/ultra:
CoD: Modern Warfare 3, COD4, CS Source
You want to step up a notch, CPU i3-3225, HD 7750, Z75 or Z77 motherboard and fill in to fit.
Can you do i5-3570K and hd 7850 or more on $1000, yes, depending on what you need to include.
You can email me through Y/A or ask when you have a paper build.
Since your question is open and vague in a way, thought I would show that you can appx get what you want for $415. You can also spend more and get less. Wanna get serious about the goals?
Took the $982 http://pcpartpicker.com/p/nZq7
to $969 http://pcpartpicker.com/p/nZGp
better cpu, better motherboard with 8GB free DRAM, better graphics, swizzled the rest.
This can take a CPU upgrade of i5-3570K plus cooler, 2nd HD 7870 in SLI
Can I use a laptop computer/notebook computer for gaming?
Q. If yes, is it possible to use liquid cooling for it and all that other stuff? What do I need?
Thanks in advance, guys.
Thanks in advance, guys.
A. Yes, depends on the game though, if you want to play a game thats high in taking alot of your CPU like runescape, then you're more likely to not have anything on BUT that game so it doesn't slow down the game or the computer. Besides, you're computer free space makes a difference too, if you have alot of free space in your computer then you won't have troubles playing a game.
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