You should build your own. Alienware cases are the best looking but they don't give as much mileage for your money.likalaruku said:When my 5 year old Sony dies, I'm totally buying a gaming rig. Is Alienware supposed to be the best?
You should build your own. Alienware cases are the best looking but they don't give as much mileage for your money.likalaruku said:When my 5 year old Sony dies, I'm totally buying a gaming rig. Is Alienware supposed to be the best?
Thanks for the input, if i get an i5/phenom i can drop my costs to a cool 600 dollarsHorticulture said:For a <$1000 budget, skip the i7. Its advantages over i5 and Phenom 2 (hyperthreading, memory bandwidth, multi-GPU scaling) won't have much effect on gaming performance with a single video card. As an overclocker, you'll be able to get phenomenal results with Intel's i3 530 (dual core+HT), i5 750 (quad/no HT), or AMD's Phenom II 955/965. Any of those should get close to 4ghz on air.
Speaking of cooling, watercooling probably isn't the best choice from a value perspective. It'll definitely help you hit higher clocks and lower temps, but the expensive of a spacious case, a radiator, CPU/GPU waterblocks, pumps, tubing etc. puts it firmly in enthusiast territory.
I'd recommend avoiding most nVidia cards right now. The 200 series' prices have risen over the past few months, so you'll end up paying more than you would for a similarly performing Radeon. The venerable here [http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/searchtools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=6020570&SRCCODE=GOOGLEBASE&cm_mmc_o=VRqCjC7BBTkwCjCECjCE] for some choices at several price points, including a comparison chart on the last page. A 4890 alongside an OC'd quad will run fine on a Corsair PSU in the 600 watt range. You could probably get by with less, but it wouldn't be much cheaper anyway.
4 gigs of DDR3 shouldn't be much more than $100, check newegg [http://www.newegg.com].
Edit: I use Prime95 for stress testing, one instance per core.
My expertise is more around the area of accidently breaking anything I touch.crepesack said:You should build your own. Alienware cases are the best looking but they don't give as much mileage for your money.likalaruku said:When my 5 year old Sony dies, I'm totally buying a gaming rig. Is Alienware supposed to be the best?
If you're planning to overclock (or give it a try), the Phenom II 965 BE should be quite easy to overclock because of the unlocked multiplier.crepesack said:Thanks for the input, if i get an i5/phenom i can drop my costs to a cool 600 dollars.
Nah. Very flashy cases and average kit inside.likalaruku said:Is Alienware supposed to be the best?
750 is more than enough for his proposed setup.lacktheknack said:Not quite sure if 750 will be enough (I have a kilowatt).crepesack said:Is a 500watt PSU enough to run a GTX 200? or do need a 750?lacktheknack said:Yes, it is worth it. A good GPU would be anything from the GTX 200 series (Nvidia, anyways), and invest in an i7 CPU - it's definitely worth it.
You beat me to it, ace advice.Horticulture said:For a <$1000 budget, skip the i7. Its advantages over i5 and Phenom 2 (hyperthreading, memory bandwidth, multi-GPU scaling) won't have much effect on gaming performance with a single video card. As an overclocker, you'll be able to get phenomenal results with Intel's i3 530 (dual core+HT), i5 750 (quad/no HT), or AMD's Phenom II 955/965. Any of those should get close to 4ghz on air.
Speaking of cooling, watercooling probably isn't the best choice from a value perspective. It'll definitely help you hit higher clocks and lower temps, but the expensive of a spacious case, a radiator, CPU/GPU waterblocks, pumps, tubing etc. puts it firmly in enthusiast territory.
I'd recommend avoiding most nVidia cards right now. The 200 series' prices have risen over the past few months, so you'll end up paying more than you would for a similarly performing Radeon. The venerable here [http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/searchtools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=6020570&SRCCODE=GOOGLEBASE&cm_mmc_o=VRqCjC7BBTkwCjCECjCE] for some choices at several price points, including a comparison chart on the last page. A 4890 alongside an OC'd quad will run fine on a Corsair PSU in the 600 watt range. You could probably get by with less, but it wouldn't be much cheaper anyway.
4 gigs of DDR3 shouldn't be much more than $100, check newegg [http://www.newegg.com].
Edit: I use Prime95 for stress testing, one instance per core.