- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,579
- 10,215
- 126
Are you a human?
Not bad, for the "tower" variety of Dell desktop, that can carry full-height and double-wide video cards.
Also, this is the Ivy Bridge model, going by reviews, and my personal experience with them, has been that the Sandy / Ivy models, used standard ATX PSU connections, and it was starting with the Haswell generation, that they moved to the proprietary PSU connection style.
So, with a little luck, you SHOULD be able to replace the PSU with whatever ATX supply you want (as long as it fits, length-wise, prefer modular to fit next to the DVD drive), and put in a decent video card, like a soon-to-be-released GTX 1660 Super (Oct. 29th) or a GTX 1650 Super (Nov 22nd) OR an RX 5500 or RX 5500 XT, whenever those will be released ("towards the end of the year"). Or just the old 1080P standby these days, a (potentially used, to save some cash) RX 570/580 card.
(*) If you don't feel comfortable replacing the PSU, or for some reason, it has a proprietary connector on the unit you get, then a GTX 1650 without the 6-pin PCI-E power connector is what you're going to need. I think that several of the Gigabyte models are like that. EVGA may need the power connector, as those are mostly overclocked. Zotac, I think, offers one of each variety.
Bump up the RAM to 16GB (should have four DIMM sockets, I think, not 100% sure), add a SATA 2.5" SSD (should be an extra SATA port and power lead by the HDD bays), and you'll be rocking! (I've done this with a couple of older Dell towers, it's an easy build with a clean refurb, and makes a solid gaming PC - albeit limited to a quad-core CPU, which may be limiting for some modern 2019 AAA games just coming out that were designed for six/eight-core CPUs.)