I'll just follow Señor Blain's handy little sticky at the top.
Abit ASUS motherboards, Samsung Hard Drives, and Corsair PSUs. Lian Li cases are the hotness, but I'm not Bernie Madoff circa early 2008.
Now, on to the good bits. I am obviously completely open to whatever suggestions you may have (why else post here?).
CPU: 2500K sound about right? Not wildly different from the 2600K, much cheaper, and should be plenty powerful/fun to play around with. $225
Motherboard: ASUS P8P67. P67 = overclocking fun, the color scheme is teh sex for when I eventually do some case mods, USB 3.0, SATA3 so any future SSD purchases won't be bottlenecked, and a beautiful UEFI. $160
RAM: Whichever (preferably black) 2x4GB DDR3 1600 mhz 1.5V kit is cheapest at the time I place my order. 1600 mhz/CL9 seems to be the price/performance king right now, and I figure anything less than 8GB really isn't fitting for sandy bridge, now is it? I understand 4GB will suffice most of the time, but I can see lots of multitasking in my future, and I know future programs will only use more and more memory. ~$110
GPU: XFX 6950. Can be unlocked to be a 6970, which is kind of the shit, and stores the original BIOS as well so as not to mess with that double lifetime warranty. $300
Hard Drive: Samsung F3 1TB. Seems like more storage than I'll need for the foreseeable future, and the performance is about as good as it gets in the realm of mechanical disks. Should also do nicely as bulk storage when I eventually jump on the SSD bandwagon. $70
Optical Drive: Whichever 24x DVD Burner is cheapest when I order, although I tend to prefer LG and Samsung. ~$20
Case: I'm probably looking at the Antec 300 for now, as I don't want to spend a ton, it performs admirably, should fit everything, and is a blank canvas for future mods (and won't cost a fortune to replace when I do something stupid). $60
PSU: Corsair 550VX? I know Corsair are about as good as it gets for the most important (reliability wise) component in your build. I figure 550w is plenty, even with future additions and overclocking in mind, and I've heard the Builder Series isn't quite as good as previous editions. $80.
That puts me right at $1025, certainly within my budget, and I think it provides me with exactly what I'm looking for. I have a copy of Windows 7 64-bit, I've got plenty of mice and keyboards, and I'll budget out a monitor (24", 1920x1200) and speakers later. So sound off!
I want to be able to play the latest games with the highest detail settings, but this isn't just a dedicated gaming build. I'd like to be able to use it as my everyday PC, doing basic photo and video editing and encoding, and a bunch of other less hardware intensive tasks. Like listening to Justin Bieber on iTunes as I have 17 tabs open in IE editing my various myspaces and facebooks and emoscene.com profiles.1. What YOUR PC will be used for. That means what types of tasks you'll be performing.
Within about $100 of $1000.2. What YOUR budget is. A price range is acceptable as long as it's not more than a 20% spread
3. What country YOU will be buying YOUR parts from.
I wouldn't consider myself a fanboy of any hardware manufacturers, but I do appreciate companies with reputations for consistent quality and customer service. I generally like Intel CPUs,4. IF YOU have a brand preference. That means, are you an Intel-Fanboy, AMD-Fanboy, ATI-Fanboy, nVidia-Fanboy, Seagate-Fanboy, WD-Fanboy, etc.
I have nothing but a soldering iron and dremel, which I hope to put to good use :thumbsup:5. If YOU intend on using any of YOUR current parts, and if so, what those parts are.
While I'm 18 and have never built a computer, I've religiously followed anandtech.com and bit-tech.net (tomshardware.com is really losing its luster) since 13, so I like to think I know what I'm talking about.6. IF YOU have searched and/or read similar threads.
Is this even a real question? While I don't keep any LN2 handy, I do plan on upgrading the air cooler (if not going to a water loop) soon after completing my build.7. IF YOU plan on overclocking or run the system at default speeds.
1920x1200 seems to be the sweet spot.8. What resolution YOU plan on gaming with.
ASAP9. WHEN do you plan to build it?
Bring it.10. Don't ask for a build configuration critique or rating if you are thin skinned.
Now, on to the good bits. I am obviously completely open to whatever suggestions you may have (why else post here?).
CPU: 2500K sound about right? Not wildly different from the 2600K, much cheaper, and should be plenty powerful/fun to play around with. $225
Motherboard: ASUS P8P67. P67 = overclocking fun, the color scheme is teh sex for when I eventually do some case mods, USB 3.0, SATA3 so any future SSD purchases won't be bottlenecked, and a beautiful UEFI. $160
RAM: Whichever (preferably black) 2x4GB DDR3 1600 mhz 1.5V kit is cheapest at the time I place my order. 1600 mhz/CL9 seems to be the price/performance king right now, and I figure anything less than 8GB really isn't fitting for sandy bridge, now is it? I understand 4GB will suffice most of the time, but I can see lots of multitasking in my future, and I know future programs will only use more and more memory. ~$110
GPU: XFX 6950. Can be unlocked to be a 6970, which is kind of the shit, and stores the original BIOS as well so as not to mess with that double lifetime warranty. $300
Hard Drive: Samsung F3 1TB. Seems like more storage than I'll need for the foreseeable future, and the performance is about as good as it gets in the realm of mechanical disks. Should also do nicely as bulk storage when I eventually jump on the SSD bandwagon. $70
Optical Drive: Whichever 24x DVD Burner is cheapest when I order, although I tend to prefer LG and Samsung. ~$20
Case: I'm probably looking at the Antec 300 for now, as I don't want to spend a ton, it performs admirably, should fit everything, and is a blank canvas for future mods (and won't cost a fortune to replace when I do something stupid). $60
PSU: Corsair 550VX? I know Corsair are about as good as it gets for the most important (reliability wise) component in your build. I figure 550w is plenty, even with future additions and overclocking in mind, and I've heard the Builder Series isn't quite as good as previous editions. $80.
That puts me right at $1025, certainly within my budget, and I think it provides me with exactly what I'm looking for. I have a copy of Windows 7 64-bit, I've got plenty of mice and keyboards, and I'll budget out a monitor (24", 1920x1200) and speakers later. So sound off!
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