Hello! I was wondering if anyone could help me do a parts list surrounding a video card I purchased recently. I have an older desktop that started blue screening constantly, eventually wouldn't boot up at all. I have never built a pc before and figured I'd give it a shot. I've replaced parts here and there but that's about the extent of it.
The intent of the rig is gaming. I play mmo's but also games like Stellaris, Total War, things like those that can become very slow late game.
The GPU is a
Gigabyte GeForce RTX 3050 8GB 8 GB EAGLE OC Video Card.
I would need a CPU, CPU cooler, motherboard, memory, storage, power supply and a case. Anything else I'm missing there for core components?
Budget is ~$1500 USD, not counting the GPU I already have.
I don't really have any brand loyalty so whatever works best in your opinions would be great!
Comments
Start with the CPU, that more or less will define everything else.
https://www.newegg.com/insider/building-a-gaming-pc-for-the-first-time-dont-panic-this-guide-can-help-you-out/
$1500 is more than enough to build a rig around that GPU you got coming. You don't need to go overboard. You will probably come in around a bit more than half that amount, even with decent parts in all the slots.
I wouldn't go too crazy on the CPU or components with that GPU. Pairing it with, say, a very pricey Core i9 or Ryzen 9 with a 1500W PSU would be ... I won't say a waste of money, but I would say a poor allocation of your funding.
Don't forget the peripherals -- keyboard, mouse, mousepad, headphones and/or speakers, monitor, a desk & chair, etc. Some of that you may already have, but I don't always assume. Prebuild systems often come with a good bit of that, but when you build your own, you are on your own.
a) Do a repair / upgrade by switching parts inside your old computer
b) Do a new computer build, but check if something from your old computer could still be used: For example computer cases don't really get old and very rarely break, so if your old case is good you could recycle it. Also you can often buy a new and faster hard drive for the new computer's primary drive, but then recycle the HDD/SSD from old computer as extra drive to get some storage space. Also, if you have DVD/Blu-ray/etc. you can normally just take that drive from your old computer and attach it to the new one
c) Or do you want to just buy all new parts?
Then you should also decide whether you want a new keyboard / mouse / monitor / speakers / headset to fit that budget, or if you'll just use your old ones.
Especially monitors have improved over the years, and even if you already have perfectly fine decade -old monitor, you might want to consider whether you want to keep it or buy something new. For example this monitor is atm $300, and something like that could be fit into $1 500 budget:
https://www.amazon.com/SAMSUNG-32-Inch-Odyssey-FreeSync-LC32G55TQWNXZA/dp/B08FF3HDW5
B - What I can use out of the old one is the optical drive, wi-fi . For storage I was thinking I would get a new 1TB SSD to house the OS (windows), and a few of the heavier hitting games. I have an external 250 gb SSD I would re-use for a little extra faster storage . And I could use the old mechanical 1tb HDD for miscellaneous storage. I do think a case would be my last purchase because I do want to see how it all would fit in the case I have. Nothing is really wrong with it other than some of the plastic little partitions have gone missing apparently over the years. If I clean up the fans really good I may also be able to re-use those.
C - I like the idea of going new with alot of it, a fresh start. So at least the cpu, psu, memory, mobo. Just spitballing but it seems like I can get those core parts for around maybe $700 for decent options.
I have all the peripherals although for quality of life I would probably upgrade the monitor, and I could use a fresh mouse and keyboard.
Thanks for the suggestions and questions. Just started really thinking about this build.
https://pcpartpicker.com/list/4bKbRv
What kind of wifi card your old computer has? I picked a motherboard with integrated wifi that would have:
"WIFI 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, supporting 2.4/5 GHz Dual-Band
Support for 11ac wireless standard and up to 433 Mbps data rate"
But that motherboard suggestion is only in case it would be upgrade to whatever you dedicated wifi card can do. If your dedicated card is better, then get a motherboard without wifi and transfer the card from old computer.
That list I made has CPU (includes CPU fan) + mobo + RAM (32 GB) + PSU (700W) + NVMe SSD (1 TB). Total price at the time I wrote this is 548.85$ before rebates. The list is made assuming that you don't need to buy case (or case fans), GPU, or operating system.
That motherboard I suggested might need BIOS update before it supports new Ryzen processors. If an update is needed, for that motherboard it means you'd need to have a free USB stick and use some other computer for downloading the update file.
Please note this is only what updating BIOS for that particular motherboard would require, if you buy a motherboard that might require BIOS update then you need to check how to do it with that mobo every time before buying.
How much storage space do you actually need? A quick approximation to that is, how much storage space are you actually using on your old computer? Someone who is using 3 TB on his old computer should buy more storage for a new computer than someone who is only using 200 GB on his old one. So long as you're not using outlandish amounts of storage, buying double what you're previously using should last for quite a while.
Do you really need Wi-Fi? Maybe you do, but if your desktop is going to be placed near your router, then running an Ethernet cable will be better than Wi-Fi in every way that you can think of and also most of the ones that you can't.
“Microtransactions? In a single player role-playing game? Are you nuts?”
― CD PROJEKT RED
Thanks for the notes about the bios and the partpicker list! Checking it out.
I tossed out that budget number before I really dove into the prices, thinking that things were more spendy than they actually appear to be. If I get a well rounded system far under that budget, all good!
I am using about 1.5 terabytes of storage on my gaming laptop (which is what i've been using since the desktop died). I suppose I was using about the same on the desktop. So I'd be looking preferably at a 2 TB SSD. I'd likely add the HDD from my desktop for another TB of space for music, etc.
Wi-fi - no, don't really need it. I have an ethernet cable run to the room i'd have it in already so it would just be a fall-back if at all.
Thanks everyone! I always feel like there are great bits of knowledge that get tossed around in here.
“Microtransactions? In a single player role-playing game? Are you nuts?”
― CD PROJEKT RED
Now that you can readily get a 2 TB hard drive for around $50 or a 4 TB drive for around $80, there's no need to rely on an older drive that may not be reliable anymore. If you need several TB of capacity, then get your 1-2 TB SSD and also a hard drive of whatever capacity you need. It's not like it can't fit your budget.
This is just my opinion, but imho it's good idea to spend some effort worrying about backups, but for normal home use not really necessary to worry about hard drive reliability. The difference between a hard drives that should be more reliable or less reliable just isn't enough to be worth the price and effort.
With that said, if you're looking for 2TB SSD then this one would be good if it's in stock:
https://pcpartpicker.com/product/dBBG3C/crucial-p3-2-tb-m2-2280-nvme-solid-state-drive-ct2000p3ssd8
If that's not in stock, then this one is also decent, and it's on sale at Newegg at the moment:
https://www.newegg.com/team-group-2tb-mp33-pro/p/N82E16820331564?Item=N82E16820331564
If you want to spend money on it, you could get even larger SSD. For example this 4TB SSD is $290:
https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1710647-REG/crucial_ct4000p3ssd8_4tb_p3_nvme_pcie.html/DFF/d10-v21-t1-x1183896/SID/87431X1560958Xa78ac8ed6d91e37984f0739dc88ada94
EDIT: But if you want more than 2TB, at that point it becomes a lot cheaper to buy 1TB SSD plus a large mechanical hard disk for extra storage.
i already have the GPU so that's less off the cost (kinda). ordered most of the parts now.
Going to use my big ass old case
You said something about being near the router, i have a line run from it to the room the pc would bein, about 25 feet. Is there a length of cable where connection starts to deteriorate? i ping great to games, chicago servers espeiclaly at about 25 ms.
I think Quizzical meant more along the lines "If the router is on different floor at far end of the house WiFi might be better so that you don't have to place cable through multiple rooms, hallways and stairs", rather than signal deterioration.
Pcpartpicker.com gives you a build link inside yellowish box that's above your part list. You need to copy-paste that to get a link that works for others.
EDIT: Look for this kind of box and copy link from it:
1) the computer needs to move around a lot,
2) having a cable wind around through doorways across rooms is tacky, risky, or otherwise obnoxious, or
3) the person doesn't know any better.
These aren't mutually exclusive. Option (1) is common for laptops and rare for desktops. Option (2) is more of a judgment call.
There is a maximum length of Ethernet cables before the signal degrades, but it's probably not relevant to you. A cat 6 ethernet cable (and if you're buying a new cable, get cat 6, as it's basically the same price as lesser grades) is rated at 10 Gbps up to 50 meters, or 1 Gbps up to 100 meters. The former is important for some enterprise uses, but the latter is probably what's relevant to you. The latency difference from a longer cable will be under a microsecond, and even a very long ethernet cable is still going to be lower latency than Wi-Fi, even if not by a large enough margin to actually matter.
If you think you need a 25 foot cable, then buy a 50 foot one. You don't want to pull the cable tight and potentially trip over it. Extra length can allow the cable to follow the perimeter of a room and keep it out of the way rather than cutting across the middle. If you own your own home, you can also drill a hole through a wall to feed a cable through it, though this may not be an option if you're renting.
Logic, my dear, merely enables one to be wrong with great authority.
Brenics ~ Just to point out I do believe Chris Roberts is going down as the man who cheated backers and took down crowdfunding for gaming.