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Question Please Tell if There are any issues with the following build.

Medhansh@14

Junior Member

PC
CPU - Ryzen 5 5500
MOBO - MSI B550M Pro-Vdh WiFi
RAM - Teamgroup T-Force Vulcan (2x8) 16GB 3200 MHz
SSD - SP Silicon Power P34A60 1TB NVMe
GPU - XFX Speedster SWFT210 Radeon RX 6650XT
Case - MSI MAG Forge 320R
Extensions - Antec Power Supply Premium Sleeved Extension Cable Kit 300mm (Red & Black)
PSU - Cooler Master MWE 550 Bronze V2 Power Suppl

Peripherals
Monitor - Acer EK220Q 21.5 Inch
Keyboard - Redragon Kumara K552 Rainbow LED
Mouse - Kero Hawk
MousePad - WAR HAMMER GX1050
Headset - EKSA T8 Stereo Gaming Headset Red, over-ear, Wired
UPS - APC Back-UPS BX1100C-IN 1100VA / 660W, 230V,

I live in India and need a Wi-Fi MOBO and Have a budget of 90k this is my first PC and it is for gaming, please tell me if any issues.
 
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Why are you building a 4 year old platform? And a 4 year old Gen 3 NVME? I got my first Gen 4 NVME over 4 years ago.
Other than that...
 
I would say, if you're interested in an AM4 platform, since you're going with a PCIe4.0 board, you may want to get the Ryzen 5 5600. The Ryzen 5 5500 only does PCIe3.0.

For SSD, you won't notice much of a day-to-day difference with PCIe 3.0 vs 4.0, but you could potentially see a difference if you end up with a GPU that's PCIe4.0 with only 4 or 8 lanes.
 
If you didn't need any gaming capabilities, you could just go with an AM5 platform and a cheap Ryzen 5 7600. It would give you room to have future upgrades if your needs change, or if you want to drop in a new processor later.
 
Are you in the US? If so, is there a Micro Center nearby?

With holiday sales coming up, and the fact that you want to game, I'd say you may want to price out an AM5 system, maybe with a 7600 or 7600X, and wait for expected upcoming sales. You may even find a deal for a bundle with a 7800x3D, which is a great gaming CPU.

Id also be inclined to suggest steering clear of an Intel card if this is your first time building. The drivers have gotten better, but you'll have better support with a comparable AMD or Nvidia card.
 

I know this might be pushing your budget a little, but this is kind of "non-sale" prices. There might be some better deals as we get closer to Christmas/BF/Cyber Monday/etc...

If I recall, the LanCool 215 is a top-rated mid-tier case which should be great for cooling with just the stock fans. PSU leaves you with some room to grow, if you later want to upgrade the GPU. And the GPU should be a better value than the Intel Arc you selected above.
 
Are you in the US? If so, is there a Micro Center nearby?

With holiday sales coming up, and the fact that you want to game, I'd say you may want to price out an AM5 system, maybe with a 7600 or 7600X, and wait for expected upcoming sales. You may even find a deal for a bundle with a 7800x3D, which is a great gaming CPU.

Id also be inclined to suggest steering clear of an Intel card if this is your first time building. The drivers have gotten better, but you'll have better support with a comparable AMD or Nvidia card.
I agree with you, but the OP is in India and appears to be super price constrained.
If I had a hard budget of $600 for a gaming PC, I would be buying a used GPU. Maybe also a used Zen 3 CPU, depending on the price vs. new.

Otherwise, I would save up until I had enough for an AM5 build. The problem is AMD has abandoned the low end segment they used to "dominate," so it's not easy to build a super budget rig with AMD nowadays (yes, there's AM4 but that isn't ideal for the reasons already stated in this thread).
 
I agree with you, but the OP is in India and appears to be super price constrained.
If I had a hard budget of $600 for a gaming PC, I would be buying a used GPU. Maybe also a used Zen 3 CPU, depending on the price vs. new.

Otherwise, I would save up until I had enough for an AM5 build. The problem is AMD has abandoned the low end segment they used to "dominate," so it's not easy to build a super budget rig with AMD nowadays (yes, there's AM4 but that isn't ideal for the reasons already stated in this thread).
Didn't see that he was outside the US in India. That definitely changes the landscape.
 

I know this might be pushing your budget a little, but this is kind of "non-sale" prices. There might be some better deals as we get closer to Christmas/BF/Cyber Monday/etc...

If I recall, the LanCool 215 is a top-rated mid-tier case which should be great for cooling with just the stock fans. PSU leaves you with some room to grow, if you later want to upgrade the GPU. And the GPU should be a better value than the Intel Arc you selected above.
let me check how much it is on amazon and i need all new partsBTW
 
I like the build you listed in the first post. I've used a Ryzen 5500, and it should be easy to overclock to 4.5GHz+ even on a budget board like that.

Have you done your homework on ARC? You doubtless know you need to enable resizable bar immediately. Besides that, the only other real necessity in my experience with the ARC A750 is using DXVK 32bit or 64bit with games that have frame pacing issues. It can get things running smooth.
 
I like the build you listed in the first post. I've used a Ryzen 5500, and it should be easy to overclock to 4.5GHz+ even on a budget board like that.

Have you done your homework on ARC? You doubtless know you need to enable resizable bar immediately. Besides that, the only other real necessity in my experience with the ARC A750 is using DXVK 32bit or 64bit with games that have frame pacing issues. It can get things running smooth.
no, I have not done that much research on the ARC
 
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