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Jared9 09-08-2014 12:46 PM

Budget gaming pc
 
Is it possible to have a good gaming pc on a budget of about $400-550 (au)? If so what would be some recommended parts and websites to go to?

Also windows 8 or 7?

Yog 09-08-2014 01:51 PM

To be honest, I'd recommend putting in AT LEAST 850 in Australian Currency.

Newegg is a pretty good site, but I'm not sure where they cover shipping. I can throw together a 550 Dollar PC and tell ya if it's worth it.

Windows 8 works wonders with a touch screen moniter, but using a mouse is torture. Windows 7 is a must.
----
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/6Xv3WZ

This is the best I could do, without an OS, case, or Network Card. Yet it's still past your range.

Sadly I'm not the best when "more for your money" is a factor. I go for the pretty parts.

Hopefully someone who's better can help.

Skill 09-08-2014 02:15 PM

Are APUs even worth it if you're getting a dedicated GPU? I always thought people got APUs for the built in graphics.

Also Newton's built is overpriced. There's no reason you need 16 GB of RAM for gaming. I use 8 GB and run into no issues, even with a dozen chrome tabs open and several background programs. You could probably even get away with 4 GB or 6 GB if you wanted.

If you're looking to make a budget gaming PC for that price, keep in mind it won't run games maxed out, and only on low-medium.

Anyways, here's my suggestions to change with his build:

-Keep the CPU
-Only get 8 GB of RAM, not 16.
-Don't bother getting a video card now if you can't afford it, save for a potential future upgrade. Don't buy a cheap one for less than $100, you won't see much of an improvement over the APU.
-Get a Case/Dvd RW drive, you'll need it to build it.
-You'll either need a wireless PCI card or a USB adapter if you want to use wifi and not ethernet(wired internet)
-if you're planning to use a lot of usb ports, get an ATX fm2 Motherboard, not Micro-atx


Windows 8 vs windows 7 is mainly preference based, however I'd say windows 8 is more future proof, and it only windows 8 supports directx12 when it comes out.

Yog 09-08-2014 02:25 PM

Pretty sure I chose 2 sticks of 4 gigs.

http://i.gyazo.com/f78406aa96fc64a789cb974bea116136.png

I don't know what you're looking at.

If the Motherboard I chose has an integrated Graphics Card, then obviously don't get the Graphics Card I picked out unless you can invest, as Skill mentioned.

Crono 09-08-2014 05:20 PM

Quote:

Posted by Newton (Post 504230)
Pretty sure I chose 2 sticks of 4 gigs.

http://i.gyazo.com/f78406aa96fc64a789cb974bea116136.png

I don't know what you're looking at.

If the Motherboard I chose has an integrated Graphics Card, then obviously don't get the Graphics Card I picked out unless you can invest, as Skill mentioned.

http://puu.sh/bqOKV/04c6d67277.png

Not only is that 16GB, but the speeds dont match.

Yog 09-08-2014 05:26 PM

I have no idea how that got there.

fp4 09-08-2014 06:43 PM

Suggestion:

PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant

CPU: *Intel Pentium G3420 3.2GHz Dual-Core Processor ($79.00 @ CPL Online)
Motherboard: *ASRock H81M-DGS Micro ATX LGA1150 Motherboard ($57.00 @ CPL Online)
Memory: *Patriot 4GB (1 x 4GB) DDR3-1600 Memory ($46.00 @ CPL Online)
Storage: *Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive ($61.00 @ Centre Com)
Video Card: Gigabyte Radeon R7 260X 2GB Video Card ($145.00 @ PCCaseGear)
Case: Silverstone PS08B (Black) MicroATX Mid Tower Case ($45.00 @ CPL Online)
Power Supply: *Corsair CX 430W 80+ Bronze Certified Semi-Modular ATX Power Supply ($69.00 @ CPL Online)
Optical Drive: *LG GH24NSB0 DVD/CD Writer ($19.00 @ CPL Online)
Total: $521.00
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
*Lowest price parts chosen from parametric criteria
Generated by PCPartPicker 2014-09-09 03:42 EST+1000

You will have to find a copy of Windows:

http://www.reddit.com/r/buildapc/com..._8_as_a_trial/

Jared9 09-08-2014 10:47 PM

Thanks guys for you help :)

Yog 09-09-2014 01:45 AM

I just don't see getting away with a dual core processor, but that's my problem when it comes to picking parts.

fp4 09-09-2014 05:34 AM

Quote:

Posted by Newton (Post 504358)
I just don't see getting away with a dual core processor, but that's my problem when it comes to picking parts.

The Pentium G3240 has the same Haswell cores as the Haswell i3/i5/i7 just there's only two of them. For a budget gaming build they work absolutely fine and it leaves you open to upgrading to an i5/i7 down the line.

Pentium Benchmarks:

http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/...ce,3849-4.html

The Pentium has no trouble beating or matching the performance of AMD's "quad cores". For games that benefit much beyond 2 cores the Pentium absolutely kills AMD in every regard.

Silly Frog 09-09-2014 02:57 PM

It's possible to get a good PC for that price, here in the states that is. AU I don't know since AU charges alot more on everything. lol I don't even think y'all have a dollar menu yet you say you get paid "$17 an hour" for minimum wage. ANYWAYS

I would consider just picking up some used parts on eBay, NewEgg is pure sh*t, they overcharge everything and everyone just bites the dust so they can say "I bought it on NewEgg". lol like anyone cares...

My first gaming laptop I bought on Craigslist for $100, yes...$100 for an i7 3.4GHz, 4GB, Nvidia GT505, 500Gb laptop. Guy tried ripping me off by selling me a laptop with Windows 8 "trail". He didn't know how to get it back to Windows 7 after realizing that Windows 8 wasn't free.

Best laptop I had, sold it for $400 and bought a watercooled desktop on Craigslist yet again from some kid that was going to college and didn't want to take it with him. Sold that 5months later for a Surface Pro + Keyboard and $100. Played with Surface pro, showed off to everyone at school that I own such a costly new device (back when it was new and costed a ton). lol then sold it for $500 and started building my own PC part by part.

Ended up spending $650 for everything I have now.

So yea I would consider bumping up your price margin since you're in sh*tty AU. Cause you're not going to get anything cheap out of that country.

Lastly, if you plan on ever getting Windows 8 for gaming...enjoy your lag and "Not supported". Anyone that says Win8 is good for gaming only plays Minecraft while fapping to midget porn all day.

Infernus Lapse 09-09-2014 04:16 PM

Bought an HP 2000 laptop and installed an 8GB RAM upgrade and I can run really any game fine, albeit a bit of frame drops when your playing bigger games, but reducing the quality a bit fixes that right up.

Also HP computers make windows 8 so much more bearable

Crono 09-09-2014 08:17 PM

Based on what I've experienced, don't bother wasting a lot of money on a gaming laptop. Buy a laptop for school/whatever and buy a desktop for gaming.

Vivid 09-09-2014 08:40 PM

Quote:

Posted by Jaredish (Post 504213)
Is it possible to have a good gaming pc on a budget of about $400-550 (au)? If so what would be some recommended parts and websites to go to?

Also windows 8 or 7?

Absolutely!

Check out Austin Evans, videos about electronics and how to build a variety of different P.C.s

Sorry can't post a link, but his channel is Austin Evans@YouTube
Windows 7; It's mostly preference, in the future Windows 8 will have more updates but Windows 7 Is easier to use and runs a bit smoother currently.

Stratus 09-10-2014 01:14 AM

I made this PC:


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