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Chad

Platinum Member
Oct 11, 1999
2,224
0
76
Ok, I'm going to definitely pass on the IPS now as input lag of any kind is what I'm trying the most to avoid. I'm extremely sensitive to input lag & that's one of the main things I want to avoid at all costs. In fact this is the performance aspect to monitor's I was meaning earlier. I lost my love for pc gaming when moving from the smoothness & immediacy of input feel of crt's to my 1st (& still current) lcd monitor. I'm hoping they've got rid of that latency issue or whatever they call it (7ms, 5ms, etc). My monitor, one of the early lcd's is horrible & I lost that smooth instant feel.

I would like the highest performance available in this regard (lowest #) for sure. Colors are great but would be a distant 2nd for me.
 

Upgrade_Itch

Senior member
Apr 25, 2012
236
0
0
Not all IPS panel type monitors have a lot of input lag. It depends on type of IPS (e-ips, s-ips, p-ips)....

IPS will give you THE best image quality. E-IPS comprimises a small percentage of that superiority but it makes your gaming experience comparable to a TN panel type of monitor, but with more colorful + accurate images.

I recommend NEC, Dell or Asus e-IPS type monitors to gamers....anyday, allday
 

Chad

Platinum Member
Oct 11, 1999
2,224
0
76
And it has no more lag that the best of the TN tech panels? For sure.
 

mfenn

Elite Member
Jan 17, 2010
22,400
5
71
www.mfenn.com
OK, so the OP sounds a little confused and conflicted, so I'm going to throw out a reasonable high-end build without specifically trying to go out and blow $3700.

i5 3570K $230 AP
Scythe Mugen 3 $55
ASRock Z77 Extreme4 $140
Patriot DDR3 1600 8GB x2 $84
7950 x2 $850
Xonar DGX $45
Crucial M4 256GB $245
Seagate 1TB HDD $100
Lite-ON BD-RW $79
XFX Core 850W $102 AR
Corsair 550D $140
Subtotal: $2070 AR AP

Logitech G400 $40
Leopold Tactile Touch $110
HPZR2740w $680 - Good 27" 2560x1440 IPS monitor with low input latency
Creative Inspire T10 $55 - Most high-end monitors worth considering don't with speakers and these are a pretty decent 2.0 set
Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit $100
Total: $3055 AR AP
 

krnmastersgt

Platinum Member
Jan 10, 2008
2,873
0
0
Yeah in my drowsy state I made a lot of errors in parting out the build, my apologies for that.

That aside, I know you can get the 256 GB M4 cheaper at various other sites but based on the OP I was under the assumption it was greatly preferred if everything was just ordered from Newegg.

Anyways I like mfenn's build aside from the fact that I still think the 2600k is the stronger choice due to its minute advantages in multiple areas. On a more budget oriented/overclock right now build maybe the 3570k but for the timeline of this build I'd go with the 2600k (or the 2700k hoping to get a better chip even if it's just a 2600k with some extra MHz, hopefully the higher binning would make it worth it).
 

bononos

Diamond Member
Aug 21, 2011
3,928
186
106
Should the OP be messing about with sli/xfire? The budget is there but its messy with problems like micro-stuttering esp for a lapsed gamer returning to the fold. Even modest settings should look great for someone from the p4 era.
 

mfenn

Elite Member
Jan 17, 2010
22,400
5
71
www.mfenn.com
The OP wants a machine that can handle the highest-end games at a high resolution and a dual-GPU solution is necessary to meet those requirements. Whether or not he "needs" to run everything at all max is a different question altogether. He could very well be perfectly happy with a $1000 machine.