What's the sweet spot build for a gaming PC?

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Maxpowers_32

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#1 Maxpowers_32
Member since 2006 • 995 Posts

I posted years ago about upgrading my gaming PC but still haven't done it.

When looking at a PC I see you could spend anywhere from $600 on the low end all the way up to $4,000. What's the sweet spot of upgrades? If you spend $2,000 are you getting a much better machine than for $1,500? How much better if you spend $2,500 or $3,000? My current PC has lasted me over 10 years, but I think it's time for an upgrade. If I'm not planning on 4k gaming what specs would you suggest is in the sweet spot?

My current specs:

Intel i7 2600k @3.4GHZ

RAM: 8GB

GPU: Geforce 1070

My monitor is about 27" Asus with a 1080p native resolution

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deactivated-642321fb121ca

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#2 deactivated-642321fb121ca
Member since 2013 • 7142 Posts

There isn't anymore.

6700 XT

3060 Ti

A770

These are the best budget at the moment, Nvidia and AMD have taken pricing to the extreme this gen. The rumoured 4060 Ti is laughable spec wise at a silly price.

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NfamousLegend

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#3 NfamousLegend
Member since 2016 • 1001 Posts

I would say 16gb ram, 6600 XT, an i5 or ryzen 5 cpu.

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firedrakes

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#4 firedrakes
Member since 2004 • 4365 Posts

you can go pretty cheap/used on every part but psu. never go cheap on those.

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PfizersaurusRex

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#5 PfizersaurusRex
Member since 2012 • 1503 Posts

There's nothing sweet about today's prices. The "least sour" option if you're building from scratch is probably a Ryzen 7600X system with 6700XT/3060Ti, 6600XT if you're on 60Hz. Prices vary from country to country, but those components are usually the best value.

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mrbojangles25

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#6 mrbojangles25
Member since 2005 • 58306 Posts

1080p is the sweet spot still lol. I'm happy with my 1440p but sometimes it demands too much. Glad I didn't go to 4K. But I was pretty happy at 1080p, moving to 1440 was a luxury move not something I felt I needed.

Build your PC so you can run a game with a decent framerate and settings.

Back in the day I'd buy parts as I found deals over time, now I have a decent job and can afford to build a PC outright.

PC's don't have to be expensive, though, you just need to lower your standards to a still-good-but-not-epic level.

Also pre-builts are not to be underestimated these days. With GPU's costing upwards of $1000, if you can find a pre-built for $1500 with a good GPU, go buy it.

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GeryGo

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#7  Edited By GeryGo  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 12803 Posts
@Maxpowers_32 said:

I posted years ago about upgrading my gaming PC but still haven't done it.

When looking at a PC I see you could spend anywhere from $600 on the low end all the way up to $4,000. What's the sweet spot of upgrades? If you spend $2,000 are you getting a much better machine than for $1,500? How much better if you spend $2,500 or $3,000? My current PC has lasted me over 10 years, but I think it's time for an upgrade. If I'm not planning on 4k gaming what specs would you suggest is in the sweet spot?

My current specs:

Intel i7 2600k @3.4GHZ

RAM: 8GB

GPU: Geforce 1070

My monitor is about 27" Asus with a 1080p native resolution

Never upgrade or buy a PC that will last you over the warranty years, it could die and you just wasted money

3 years build is the the rig you want to buy to play with the settings and games you want to

some i5 13600K, 32Gb RAM and RTX3060Ti / RX6600 XT should do the trick

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attirex

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#8 attirex
Member since 2007 • 2453 Posts

I built my rig in 2014. Guess it's time to upgrade?

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BassMan

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#9 BassMan
Member since 2002 • 17808 Posts

@attirex said:

I built my rig in 2014. Guess it's time to upgrade?

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attirex

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#10 attirex
Member since 2007 • 2453 Posts

@BassMan:

Lol! Hey, I'm rocking dual 970s! I rule! Well, at 1080p I can at least still play a good many games at medium settings. Although there is always that ONE game that I run into a brick wall with and forces me to upgrade. This time, it was Guardians of the Galaxy. So maybe later this year I'll get a new rig.

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rmpumper

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#11 rmpumper
Member since 2016 • 2134 Posts

@gerygo said:

Never upgrade or buy a PC that will last you over the warranty years, it could die and you just wasted money

It could, but would it? In my experience, if the hardware did not die in the first couple months of use, it will keep working for a decade or more, especially the ones without moving parts - it's either defective or not.