PC gaming THE COST

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GAunderrated

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Jul 9, 2012
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verdant monkai said:
IllumInaTIma said:
Welcome though, enjoy your stay, and remember, Steam is one manipulative ************.
Thanks!
Really? Steam seems like a good guy to me :s his sales are nice and everyone I've talked to sings its praises.
You should visit Steam's non-blood relative GreenManGaming, for some reason GMG is becoming one sexy beast with better sales than steam most times (while still using steam on most games).
 

Baneat

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Jul 18, 2008
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a 6670, deathtrap PSU, pot metal case, 1333MHz RAM and a bottom-rung motherboard should cost about what you paid for it yes.
 

Rinshan Kaihou

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Dec 3, 2009
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Well you are welcome to figure out how much I spent because I don't want to think about it.


ASUS P8Z68-V Pro/Gen 3
Intel Core i5 2500k
CoolerMaster Hyper 212+ Evo
24GB Mushkin Redline DDR3-1866
Fractal Design Define R3 Case
XFX Pro Modular 650W PSU
XFX Radeon HD 7850 Double Dissipation 2GB
256GB Crucial m4 SSD
WD 640GB Blue HDD/WD Green 1TB HDD
Samsung BD-ROM/DVD Writer
ASUS Xonar DGX

Dell S2740L IPS 27" Monitor
LG IPS236V IPS monitor
CoolerMaster CMStorm Trigger
Razer Deathadder
Windows 7 x64 Professional
Steelseries Siberia v2 Headset
 

mohit9206

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Oct 13, 2012
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I built mine for roughly $400 six months back.
Intel Sandy Bridge G630
8GB DDR3 RAM
AMD Radeon 7750 1gb gddr5
its a very entry level build but plays all my latest AAA games at good settings and frame rates.
 

VladG

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Aug 24, 2010
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verdant monkai said:
IllumInaTIma said:
Welcome though, enjoy your stay, and remember, Steam is one manipulative ************.
Thanks!
Really? Steam seems like a good guy to me :s his sales are nice and everyone I've talked to sings its praises.

Oh, we'll talk when you find yourself broke after a few good Steam Sales.



Jokes aside, Steam is the largest online distribution platform for a very good reason. It's actually pretty great, and as long as you don't want your games on launch, you can get NEW games for very low prices.
 

InfernalPaladin

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Mar 30, 2013
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EstrogenicMuscle said:
Always consult the Falcon Guide [http://www.logicalincrements.com/] when buying/building a PC.
Based off this my rig comes in at the midpoint between Extremist and Monstrous. I'll be just ticking into the $2900 mark when i get a proper monitor (not a TV haha). I feel justified however, as it's made a really good bragging point meant I won't have to upgrade in the next 4 or so years.
 

PoolCleaningRobot

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Mar 18, 2012
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I bought an alienware laptop about 4 years ago for $1200. I don't have space for a big tower and I needed something I could move around. I will probably get or build a decent desktop when I move out. My specs are a little embarrassing by today's standards. But I bought it at a time when the processors upgrades were still expensive. It was worth it though. Alienware computers typically have integrated graphics cards and faster hard drive speeds which can make all the difference. I can run most games at the highest settings if I use 1280x720 which looks good on my HD tv

As for you computer, it seems pretty legit. I hate it when people act like you can't get a good deal on a pre-built computer. That over clocked AMD processor should definitely be helpful
 

Oltsu

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Feb 16, 2013
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My current system was around $5000. However I'm somewhat of a hardware enthusiast and spend a lot of my time doing extreme overclocking with sub-zero cooling methods so it's more than a gaming PC.

I also probably have hardware for a dozen other rigs lying around. Including around 15 high end GPUs <.<
 

SwimmingRock

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Nov 11, 2009
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verdant monkai said:
IllumInaTIma said:
Welcome though, enjoy your stay, and remember, Steam is one manipulative ************.
Thanks!
Really? Steam seems like a good guy to me :s his sales are nice and everyone I've talked to sings its praises.
Yeah, but if you ask a bunch of crack addicts if crack is any good, they'll tell you it's the only reason worth living. Look, I really like Steam. Use it daily. Buy most of my games there. If any games distributor is gonna have a monopoly, Valve would be our best option. Objectively, though, it will suck the money out of you and make you love it more in return.

Yeah, I read your other posts about being poor. Doesn't matter. A few games you want will be on sale. You'll see the discount and think:"Blimey, better get it now." Next thing you know, the Summer sale's over and you spent 200 euro. It all adds up, man, and you won't even see it happen.

Fortunately, I'm still riding the high of finding obscure titles for dirt cheap. Just bought Nikopol: Secret of the Immortals for a song. It's on sale this week. Behold, I have myself become its messenger.

OT: Spent exactly 1k euro on my rig in december when it was on sale for holidays. Don't remember the exact specs, but I can laugh boisterously as I crank all settings in brand new games to max or watch auto-detect and benchmarks praise the glory of my beast (not a euphemism for my penis). Considering I would need to buy a new tv for the next console generation, I probably made out cheaper than a new console, all things considered.
 

barbzilla

He who speaks words from mouth!
Dec 6, 2010
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verdant monkai said:
I have been thinking about the state of console gaming recently, and I'm not liking what I see and hear. I've never like paying for xbox live it always seemed like a massive waste, there are other things I could slag the xbox off for but suffice to say its not perfect. And sadly the future of consoles seems equally as bleak, as its depressing present.

The PC gaming scene has always held a certain allure for me. I have never been one of those people who get a raging boner for hd graphics and the performance of a machine, those things seem utterly shallow and pointless to me. Its the extensive library of games, the MODS, and the comparative cheapness of games. Also the amazing Steam sales (I saw the Witcher2 for £6 the other day, on Xbox the minimum would be around £15).

So I finally relented and bought a PC which I am waiting for at the moment, I also need to buy a monitor, wifi card, mouse, keyboard, speakers, and a headset. Now onto the threads actual point... IT COST and is still going to cost A LOT OF MONEY. I got the pc for £325, the wifi card will be around £15 and the monitor will cost £97, and the other things I have budgeted to get individually for under £5 each.

Its gonna cost around £500 all together... (apologies to any Americans reading this but its costing me around $760) and if its as good as you PC gamer guys say I won't regret it at all. If anyone is interested in the PC here is a link to it http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/200886653771?ssPageName=STRK:MEWNX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1497.l2648

So how much did you guys pay for your rigs? that is what you call them yes?
Also please don't make any PC gaming master race comments, they churn my stomach and make PC gamers seem terrible.
It looks like you have a fairly solid machine, the important part is to not upgrade too often. This is where PC gaming can get expensive. I started out in the "OMG its new I have to have it" crowd, then finally realized that I can use (typically) 4-8 year old parts (top of the line) and still play modern games at max. In fact I just upgraded my PC this year (for a couple of indy games no less) and I haven't had to upgrade my parts since 2006.

As for how much I spent on my rig, at this point a little over 2k USD, but that is cummulitive. I have actually had enough parts to build 3 machines from that 2 grand. My girlfriend is currently using my hand me down parts, and she still plays most modern games at near max (the new Tomb Raider runs on her rig at High, Ultimate gives a little stutter, and Ultra is unplayable). With just the parts in the machine currently about 500 USD, but I also get a discount since I own a computer store and have a business account with Newegg (so I guess retail about 600 or so).

I do call my machine a rig, but I don't subscribe to the PC gaming master race. Every machine has its place, and as such I also own 2 of the current consoles (360 and Wii-U). I prefer my Wii as a sort of Media player, though I do have my 360 setup as a media extender for my PC as well, and I use my 360 for fighting games and couch side multiplayer with my girlfriend (and occasionally my brother when he can drag his ass over here).

I'm glad that you have gotten into PC gaming, I highly doubt that you will be dissatisfied. In fact I think this is the second best time to be a PC gamer period (the first time being when PC gaming first took off). With the new consoles using x84 architecture, I believe we will be seeing more of the AAA games making their way on my PC. Eventually all consoles will have a unified architecture, and the consoles/PCs will have to survive based on their own merit instead of what games they have signed as exclusives.

Captcha: wash whites separately
I think our captcha has forgotten that it isn't the 50s anymore.
 

Colt47

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Oct 31, 2012
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Oltsu said:
My current system was around $5000. However I'm somewhat of a hardware enthusiast and spend a lot of my time doing extreme overclocking with sub-zero cooling methods so it's more than a gaming PC.

I also probably have hardware for a dozen other rigs lying around. Including around 15 high end GPUs <.<
I fear that is the direction I'm eventually going to be treading once I actually get out of being a poor university student. Right now I'm happy I'm upgrading to a radeon 7970 from a 6950, especially with the free games deal going with Bioshock Infinite. Don't care much for Crisis 3, though.
 

zidine100

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Mar 19, 2009
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altogether mine was about £500, but it was a bare bones package so i had to buy quite a few parts myself.

that and some of the maintenance costs id say its up to about £650. Damn it hard drives constantly break on me. (mostly my fault, broken fan once) broken ram and me being the lazy idiot i am sometime, never got round to taking the offending stick out, making the computer crash often killing my hard drive. And then there was the time i bought a used hard drive, which was handed to me in bubble wrap instead of a anti static bag.

in hindsight ive gone oftopic, but its been about £650 £700 soo far due to my own stupidity, and will increase when it breaks again, like my dvd drive, which is being temperamental.
 

nexus

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May 30, 2012
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Nearly every major release is on PC now, so you hardly miss anything. It's always cheaper, typically looks better, and you always have the possibility of mods depending on the game. Plus you can do just plain "more" on a PC game.

I honestly consider the past 2 years a "golden age" for PC gaming. It is certainly on the up.
 

Petromir

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Apr 10, 2010
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MrTub said:
Petromir said:
Tenmar said:
Personally though you should try for this setup in terms of hard drive management.

1. One hard drive for Operating system/Storage.
2.One hard drive for games
3. One hard drive for dedicated storage.

You CAN combine the OS hard drive and the game hard drive into one but personally I'd say it is better to just give the OS a standard hard drive and use it for some storage while getting an SSD(assuming the extreme here) for games you currently play. Any games you aren't playing are probably better just uninstalled.
I'd recommend a small SSD as a system drive, not a place for bottle necks and windows works a lot better with one. Unless your packing a lot of software that you also install there a 60GB SSD for the System drive will improve boot times and prevent it becoming a performance bottle neck. Hell it improves performance of games not on it in many cases, if its the system drive.
Ssds does not improve performance in games.

They shorten the load times. Nothing else.
Depends on the game, but there are a number of games out there that load on the fly and hard drive speeds can be a bottleneck here.
 

romxxii

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Feb 18, 2010
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RicoADF said:
yes you heard right, I use a TV via HDMI connection
Doesn't that introduce some significant input lag? IIRC, the best speed you can get with a display is if you're connecting via dual-link DVI or even RGB.

verdant monkai said:
So how much did you guys pay for your rigs? that is what you call them yes?
Yes, that is what we call them. My rig in its current form is roughly a year and a half old, after I scrapped my old budget build in favor of a core i5 2500k (which also required a new mobo), and 8GB of RAM. Went through several upgrades after that, adding in a solid-state drive (a must, if you ask me), an extra 2TB HDD, aftermarket cooler, and an 850W PSU.

Since then, I've also gone through three different video cards. The first one, a Radeon 6870, was sold off to a co-worker. The second one, a factory-overclocked GTX 670, is going to my nephew. Since I'm not going to recoup any losses from purchasing that card, I factor that in my current rig's expense.

The latest GPU is a GTX 690, which by itself cost me over a thousand dollars. In fact, it'd be safe to say I've spent over $2,000 on this rig, but even that is a modest estimate at this point. It's probably closer to 3k, maybe more.


Also please don't make any PC gaming master race comments, they churn my stomach and make PC gamers seem terrible.
I always thought 'PC gaming master race' was meant to be used ironically. I know I never deliver it without tongue firmly in cheek.


barbzilla said:
...the important part is to not upgrade too often. This is where PC gaming can get expensive.
He can always sell old parts to offset the expense of upgrading.
 
Jun 6, 2012
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verdant monkai said:
I have never been one of those people who get a raging boner for hd graphics and the performance of a machine, those things seem utterly shallow and pointless to me.
That, right there, is one of the best parts of PC gaming. You don't NEED a top-end super machine like people think. You're still going to spend more than a console, but your not spending $2,000 on a single machine (which can be hard to do for a high-end setup unless you buy the latest and greatest).

The only reason I put more into quality graphics is because I record and produce videos from the games I play, but even then my last upgrade (GPU, CPU, MOBO, RAM) was only $600, and thats after having the same machine for 2.5 years.

But I'm going to flat out recommend Torchlight 2 for you, great game with a strong modding community.
 

Pharsalus

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Jun 16, 2011
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Welcome to the master race, all will bow before you now.

Fr my own part I've gone back and forth between a series of consoles and computers, but it's the PC that's my go to, my bottom ***** you might say.
 

LetalisK

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May 5, 2010
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What the...

Okay, for those who spend more than $1200 on a computer, WHY!? Unless you do something really high speed besides gaming on it that incurs costs I'm not aware of, or there is some crazy tax stuff I'm not subject to, why are you paying more than $1200? Every PC I've built or bought was between $800 and $1200(monitor included!), have lasted me years, and has no problem cranking out the latest games on ultra with processing power to spare.

And if all that money was spent on some uber GPU, I will smack a monkey.
 

Jak23

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Oct 1, 2010
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I spent about $800USD on mine counting the monitor, $700 on the PC itself. Of course I built mine which makes it cheaper.
Specs:
CPU: AMD FX6200 3.8Ghz(I ordered a 6300, but by the time I noticed I got the wrong one I'd already voided the warrenty...)
GPU: HIS Radeon HD7850
RAM: Corsair Vengeance 8GB 1600mhz
MB: Asus M5A97 LE R2.0
HDD: 1TB

Which roughly translates to 60fps on Crysis 3 max settings...
Now that I'm done jerking off to my PC, let me personally welcome you to the PC crowd. Hope you enjoy the benefits it provides, I know I did!
 

MrTub

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Mar 12, 2009
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LetalisK said:
What the...

Okay, for those who spend more than $1200 on a computer, WHY!? Unless you do something really high speed besides gaming on it that incurs costs I'm not aware of, or there is some crazy tax stuff I'm not subject to, why are you paying more than $1200? Every PC I've built or bought was between $800 and $1200(monitor included!), have lasted me years, and has no problem cranking out the latest games on ultra with processing power to spare.

And if all that money was spent on some uber GPU, I will smack a monkey.
I've spent quite a lot of money on my pc since I used to play at 5760x1080 reoslution and since the graphics cards were quite loud and were running at 90-95'c so I decided to wc them which costs a bit money as well.

And I'm currently playing at 2560x1440 and you still need a high performing pc for to be able to play at highest settings at that resolution.