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Best gaming PC
Posted on 12/12/20 at 6:31 am
Posted on 12/12/20 at 6:31 am
Need advice on gaming pc for 10 year old
Posted on 12/12/20 at 7:58 am to LSUCooper
Welcome to the world of DIY!
Unfortunately this is one of the worst times to build/buy a PC due to several CPU and now GPU supply issues.
What resolution are you targeting with this? And what refresh rate?

Unfortunately this is one of the worst times to build/buy a PC due to several CPU and now GPU supply issues.
What resolution are you targeting with this? And what refresh rate?
Posted on 12/12/20 at 8:40 am to boXerrumble
Son is 10 , I’ve looked and cost are high it seems
Just looking for beginners level suggestions
And I see that most are build your own, not like typical home PC
Just looking for beginners level suggestions
And I see that most are build your own, not like typical home PC
Posted on 12/12/20 at 8:49 am to LSUCooper
Cheapest way is to build your own, but prebuilts are fine if you don’t mind the premium. Building is very easy though.
Posted on 12/12/20 at 9:14 am to LSUCooper
Your answer to some extent should be based on the system requirements of the games he is interested in.
A pre-built system is probably your best bet since components are currently in short supply.
A pre-built system is probably your best bet since components are currently in short supply.
Posted on 12/12/20 at 9:32 am to Dixie Normus
quote:
Cheapest way is to build your own, but prebuilts are fine if you don’t mind the premium. Building is very easy though.
Prebuilts are cheaper right now
Posted on 12/12/20 at 10:18 am to LSUCooper
What types of games does he play? If not too demanding (like Fortnite or Minecraft) he could get away with the integrated graphics in a Ryzen 3400G and get a GPU later when prices settle in a few months.
Posted on 12/12/20 at 10:27 am to LSUCooper
What constitutes a "Gaming PC" other than speed?
Posted on 12/12/20 at 10:54 am to tigerpawl
Copious amounts of RGB.
Posted on 12/12/20 at 10:55 am to tigerpawl
The ability to play games and components geared to it- it is a marketing term and not really anything unique about the computer that would preclude it from business, home theatre, some server, etc use. But you probably wouldn’t have much success using a small-form factor “business” computer to play higher-end games.
When a pc is marketed this way, tends to contain higher-end components than a standard business computer (excluding CAD and intense application workstations).
They will essentially all have a discreet graphics card rather than a cpu with integrated graphics (or at least of the cpu has integrated graphics, they aren’t used). This in itself and which component is included can be pretty important. The game the player has in mind will publish recommended and minimum specs for a good experience, so if you’re looking into these for a kid who wants to “game,” you will probably do well by looking up what is recommended for the game they had in mind. Even very popular games can range from needing very low power systems (IE- any off-the-shelf pc) to having to reduce quality settings to play on middle-end machines.
They tend to not focus on low-power, fanless, silent, and small like you see with a lot of “business” or home machines leaning towards these days. Gamers tend to proudly display their case, so they take many forms that are subjectivity attractive and often contain RGB lighting. The last 10 years have seen broadband and online play supersede the concept of “LAN parties” where folks would carry their PC to their buddy’s house to play, so a handle is becoming more rare but still possible to find on a “gaming” pc.
When a pc is marketed this way, tends to contain higher-end components than a standard business computer (excluding CAD and intense application workstations).
They will essentially all have a discreet graphics card rather than a cpu with integrated graphics (or at least of the cpu has integrated graphics, they aren’t used). This in itself and which component is included can be pretty important. The game the player has in mind will publish recommended and minimum specs for a good experience, so if you’re looking into these for a kid who wants to “game,” you will probably do well by looking up what is recommended for the game they had in mind. Even very popular games can range from needing very low power systems (IE- any off-the-shelf pc) to having to reduce quality settings to play on middle-end machines.
They tend to not focus on low-power, fanless, silent, and small like you see with a lot of “business” or home machines leaning towards these days. Gamers tend to proudly display their case, so they take many forms that are subjectivity attractive and often contain RGB lighting. The last 10 years have seen broadband and online play supersede the concept of “LAN parties” where folks would carry their PC to their buddy’s house to play, so a handle is becoming more rare but still possible to find on a “gaming” pc.
Posted on 12/12/20 at 11:32 am to LSUCooper
just buy a decent laptop with a higher-end graphics card
Posted on 12/12/20 at 12:28 pm to LSUCooper
With zero knowledge I bought a higher end Digital Storm.
I had an amazing experience with them. It was extremely easy and the communication from them throughout the process was awesome.
It’s amazing but in hindsight, with some research, I could have built something similar for less.
I had an amazing experience with them. It was extremely easy and the communication from them throughout the process was awesome.
It’s amazing but in hindsight, with some research, I could have built something similar for less.
This post was edited on 12/12/20 at 2:37 pm
Posted on 12/12/20 at 2:15 pm to LSUCooper
DO NOT BUY FROM CYBERPOWER
Ive had terrible experience with them
Ive had terrible experience with them
Posted on 12/13/20 at 4:55 am to ImBetterThanYou
quote:
DO NOT BUY FROM CYBERPOWER
I’ve had just the opposite experience. They had a 2070 Super built cheaper than I could have done it myself. It arrived and one of the tempered glass panels was broken, gave them a call and they 2 day shipped the replacement with a massive mouse pad as a sorry. I’ve had the pc for 6 months, not a single issue.
Posted on 12/13/20 at 2:02 pm to LSUCooper
What other games does he play? What is your budget?
Posted on 12/13/20 at 5:29 pm to boXerrumble
Amazon has an element mini 9300
For 529$
That is around my budget
Is that decent?
Can he use a keyboard & mouse on ps4 and get a similar feel
L
He likes baseball and sport games
For 529$
That is around my budget
Is that decent?
Can he use a keyboard & mouse on ps4 and get a similar feel
L
He likes baseball and sport games
Posted on 12/13/20 at 6:09 pm to LSUCooper
As others have said the games he wants to play have min specs you could make sure whatever new PC you get matches. Having said that, I would build a little buffer room in here so the PC last longer with new titles that come out. With the new 3000 series RTX cards and other hardware advancements, 2021 is shaping up to be a great year to build/buy a new PC. I will probably be doing the same once supply stabalozes, if ever.
Posted on 12/13/20 at 8:01 pm to LSUCooper
You're going to need to specify a price range. An open-ended "best gaming PC" will cost several thousand dollars.
Building your own PC isn't always the cheapest. It just depends on the desired specs and whatnot.
Building your own PC isn't always the cheapest. It just depends on the desired specs and whatnot.
Posted on 12/14/20 at 12:35 am to LSUCooper
quote:
Amazon has an element mini 9300
For 529$
That is around my budget
Is that decent?
For the budget, and the prices of everything its not a bad deal. Someone else can chime in here, but 4C/8T Ryzen 3100 still should handle 1080p 60 Hz gaming just fine.
The RX550 GPU is your bottleneck there. I'd figure you'd need to reduce Graphics settings in most games to hit the 60 FPS mark, and you are limited by the 2 GB video memory.
I really hate giving advice on this industry right now because buying the most important parts, CPU and GPU, is a complete shitshow.
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