NameIsRobertPaulson said:
Of course. And all video games are $8.
Oh wait, that's only when Steam sales are happening, and that computer is only on the biggest sale day of the year. Plus, the price is higher with the OS which it didn't calculate for some reason. And all of this assuming that all of the parts will perfectly work together with no compatibility issues.
I pre-built mine at a more reasonable time. It was $600 with discounts. That's a LOT more realistic.
Not particularly. That list only subtracted $15 for a sale. Given how the price was so low anyway I think that's perfectly fine. And they paid for fancy RAM. Plus Everyone with a PC probably already has:
1. An OS.
2. A screen.
3. A case.
4. A PSU.
5. A Hard Drive
6. An Optical Drive.
$500 is realistic for a cheap gaming PC. This one is particularly so. I wouldn't get it because I like to play on high, while this one's integrated graphics might not cut medium.
Still, with $100 breathing room you can split it into discrete graphics/cpu and probably still be under budget. I've got another rig somewhere on here. I'll post that too.
And yeah, the games are often incredibly cheap if you wait a bit. They don't stubbornly stick at their retail price for months and months after release.
EDIT:
This is a really good cheap gaming PC:
CASE- Bitfenix Prodigy £75
CPU- Intel Core i3 3220 £90
MOBO- Asus P8H77-I Motherboard M-ITX £80
RAM- From Crucial £35
COOLING- £0
GPU- GTX 660 £150
PSU- Corsair CXM 600W £60
HDD- Seagate Barracuda 500GB 7200rpm £40
OS- Windows 8 64-bit OEM £70
If you take off the stuff they're likely to already have...
HD- 40
OS- 70
Case- 75
It comes down to £415. £15 less than the UK retail price.
And that's without dropping spec.
EDIT: Sure, the one in the picture is pretty bottom-end, but you
can do it. That's the point. The Xbox one is terrible value for money at this price range.