T_Yamamoto
Lifer
Just wondering
yeah, ive been researching itmITX gaming build is actually easier than before...
if money isn't a big problem, only problem you need to think about is what type of cooling you want (which would affect whether you can overclock or put beefy components inside)
2500k
ASRock Z68M-ITX/HT LGA 1155
Standard ATX PSU(modular would help)
LIAN LI PC-Q11B or PC-Q08
a 9" max GPU
Scythe Shuriken CPU HSF
2.5" SSD
add in a H70 corsair watercooler if you want some OC or lower temps
spend some money on a picopsu if you dont OC and want a smaller PSU
but a mATX is a lot easier/cheaper and you can fit a lot more inside (more HDDs/ better cooling/longer GPU)
Just completed a build with a Silverstone SG02 mATX... It's pretty small, and allows for a long GPU
This is my former LAN party rig.
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Plenty of people have build mini ITX gaming rigs. There are some limitations. As long as you understand and accept the limitations, you are fine.
Wow, that is pretty sweet, what kind of case is it?
that is correctLooks like the LianLI T60, which is an ATX/mATX DIY test bench.
im going mitx because of the cube like thing.These days you can build a powerful and compact gaming rig. As others said you need to be aware of the limitations and work around them, e.g., purchase a low profile cooler if you have a small case (or no after market cooler), research PSU sizes, research GPU sizes, make sure your RAM fits under the CPU cooler if it's big, etc. etc. Finding a good Z68 mITX board is problematic right now, I don't know if any company out there has properly done it (ASRock and Zotac's offerings got mixed reviews) so building a powerhouse OC'd SLI monster is probably not in the cards, but you can still put together a powerful single card rig running at stock that will be portable and/or a space saver. It's a little more homework and depending on the case the build itself can take longer, but in the end it is worth it. I put a i5-2400 and a 6850 in a Lian Li Q11 back in August, and it is nice and quiet and sleek looking and the wife loves it. Runs Skyrim like a champ!
Micro ATX is easier; more room on the mobo for after market coolers, usually some additional PCI x4 or PCI slots (but rarely two PCI x16 slots) and the cases are bigger so there are more options there. I recently put together a budget build for my parents in a Fractal Design Mini (mATX case) using a cheap H61 micro ATX, a wifi card, 8GB of RAM, a 5570, 120GB Intel 320 SSD and an i3-2100 cooled by a H212+ for around $650.00. Super quiet, boots up super fast and it looks cool (to me anyway).
That's a pretty poor card for a gaming PC. Sure, it's small, and it doesn't need extra power connectors. But it's also fanless and extra-tall.SAPPHIRE Ultimate 100326UL Radeon HD 6670 1GB 128-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 2.1 x16 HDCP Ready Video Card
Ill probably build an mitx build later on
Looks like the LianLI T60, which is an ATX/mATX DIY test bench.
SILVERSTONE Sugo Series SG05BB-450 ALL Black Plastic / SECC Mini-ITX Desktop Computer Case with SFX 450W 80+ Bronze Certified ...
SAPPHIRE Ultimate 100326UL Radeon HD 6670 1GB 128-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 2.1 x16 HDCP Ready Video Card
PNY Optima 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 (PC3 10666) Desktop Memory Model MD8192KD3-1333
ASRock H67M-ITX LGA 1155 Intel H67 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 Mini ITX Intel Motherboard
Intel Core i5-2400 Sandy Bridge 3.1GHz (3.4GHz Turbo Boost) LGA 1155 95W Quad-Core Desktop Processor Intel HD Graphics 2000 ...
Wrong. It is a Lian Li PC-T7R. The R is for red of course. It is indeed marketed by Lian Li as a test bench rig, but it will not fit ATX, mATX or Flex ATX motherboards. It will only fit ITX and DTX motherboards.