A six-core CPU? Overkill, and could cause a bit of a bottleneck in your other processing components. Knock it down to quad-core and save yourself a bit. Trust me, a six-core, even in this era of obscenely detailed graphics, is not necessary.
The case is pretty important. Spend a minimum of $50 (£20-£30, I think) to get good air-flow, build quality and builder friendliness.
This is nice: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811146025 though it's not displayed on ebuyer. Alternatively, anything by Cooler Master is going to be of good to high quality.
I couldn't tell you what the quality of the average stock CPU cooler is, but if you're getting the OEM package (the CPU and nothing else, saves a little more), I think it's best to fork out for a high-speed cooler.
Definitely upgrade the video card, if only so you can play future games eventually. Or, as an alternative, go crossfire/SLI.
On a related note, if you go with the AMD CPU, you could save yourself a little more cash by going with the ATI video cards. Pairing the two AMD technologies should squeeze that much more efficiency out of the card.
Finally, instead of one big drive, go with two 500GB drives and put them in a RAID 0 configuration. All the capacity with greater speed.
Or, as someone mentioned above, get a little SSD for the games you most want to play, OR upgrade to a 10k RPM HDD. Both options are going to cost a pretty penny, and the 10k RPM HDDs generally don't go up to 1TB (600GB was the max I found on Newegg), but there's no denying it'll make your games run that much faster.
It should be noted that MaximumPC put together what they call a "value meal PC" which is pretty much a gaming computer on a tight budget. Theirs, case, hardware and software, cost just about $670, or about £420, and was able to play everything at respectable rates. Granted, they didn't take advantage of eBay, so maybe, even with the exact same components, yours would only be roughly £380-£400.
That said, I suggest you save up some more for your PC. It's good to keep to a budget, but this build has to last you at least 5-7 years if you want to get the value of your time and money out of it.
The case is pretty important. Spend a minimum of $50 (£20-£30, I think) to get good air-flow, build quality and builder friendliness.
This is nice: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811146025 though it's not displayed on ebuyer. Alternatively, anything by Cooler Master is going to be of good to high quality.
I couldn't tell you what the quality of the average stock CPU cooler is, but if you're getting the OEM package (the CPU and nothing else, saves a little more), I think it's best to fork out for a high-speed cooler.
Definitely upgrade the video card, if only so you can play future games eventually. Or, as an alternative, go crossfire/SLI.
On a related note, if you go with the AMD CPU, you could save yourself a little more cash by going with the ATI video cards. Pairing the two AMD technologies should squeeze that much more efficiency out of the card.
Finally, instead of one big drive, go with two 500GB drives and put them in a RAID 0 configuration. All the capacity with greater speed.
Or, as someone mentioned above, get a little SSD for the games you most want to play, OR upgrade to a 10k RPM HDD. Both options are going to cost a pretty penny, and the 10k RPM HDDs generally don't go up to 1TB (600GB was the max I found on Newegg), but there's no denying it'll make your games run that much faster.
It should be noted that MaximumPC put together what they call a "value meal PC" which is pretty much a gaming computer on a tight budget. Theirs, case, hardware and software, cost just about $670, or about £420, and was able to play everything at respectable rates. Granted, they didn't take advantage of eBay, so maybe, even with the exact same components, yours would only be roughly £380-£400.
That said, I suggest you save up some more for your PC. It's good to keep to a budget, but this build has to last you at least 5-7 years if you want to get the value of your time and money out of it.