This is exactly what I think of CPU overclocking. It's a hobby that isn't usually necessary, nor that helpful, to get great performance. And $60-$65 surely is significant, being 1/3 the cost of an i5. $60 can be the difference between running an R9 280 and an R9 290 in your system, which will give a night and day performance difference vs a tiny bump in performance from a 500MHz overclock on your already very strong CPU. CPU overclocking was awesome in the 90s and early 2000s when it legitimately offered incredible price to performance gains when you could unlock the performance of top end CPUs binned as lower CPUs to keep from flooding the market with high end processors. But now you can usually only overclock the highest end Intel chips (and crap FX I guess), and I don't think it mixes well with being on a budget. Price to performance should always matter for a rational consumer, but it seems like the only time CPU overclocking offers much is for someone building a high end system to play AAA games at 120/144Hz.
I'm not suggesting anyone buy a 4690k and a 280 instead of a 4690 and a 290 and no one else in this thread is either that I've seen. If someone's build hinges on $60 and those are their options, you and I are in full agreement on which is the more prudent choice. That isn't what I responded to earlier though.
