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2/27/2016 6:13:10 PM
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Alright, Bnet. Let's build a PC.

I PC game on an ASUS Laptop. GTX655 or something like that. I love it- it is big but fits in my bag, and can play any game I want at at least 25 FPS as long as it's plugged in. 30+ almost always. 'Low' settings give me 60 often enough. ... But I want ultra. I feel comfortable enough with my income where I think it's time I get myself a desktop fully capable of playing any game on the highest settings without much issue, and future proofed at least for a couple years. The only problem is... where do I start? I don't know about prices of these things, nor would I even begin to know how to put one together. So I'm appealing to Bnet. Google found me this one someone made: http://pcpartpicker.com/user/Lonxu/saved/R4RmP6 I'm OK with the price, but I don't know if that's the best bang for my buck or if it would even be enough to meet the standards I want. So Bnet, can any of you knowledgeable folks help? I'd prefer it to not bust $2000 in total (parts, monitor, keyboard, whatever). But again, I don't know how much the things really cost. Also, I came here before Reddit.

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  • Edited by Martiis: 2/28/2016 7:21:05 AM
    This is what I would build based on what you said you're looking for. [url]http://pcpartpicker.com/p/4cGJsY[/url] All you really need for gaming as far as a CPU goes is an i5; having an i7 is nice, but at the end of the day most games still only use 4 threads. So something like the i5 6600k should last for a while. There are still people using the 2500k as IPC hasn't seen a significant increase since 2011, and we probably won't see a jump for quite some time still. 16 Gigs of ram is more than enough for now as games still aren't even using 8 yet, so you're pretty future proofed here. As for the GPU; most people are going to tell you that the 980ti is the best flagship card for the money right now, but I actually disagree with this statement. While it is a top of the line card and does perform phenomenally in current DX11 games; the R9 Fury X performs just as well trading blows on a game to game basis. But the main reason I would recommend a Fury X over a 980ti is because of DX12, and what we have seen thus far in all the benchmarks that have come out. AMD/ATI's GCN architecture is fine tuned for the features of DX12, namely asynchronous shading or asynchronous compute, whatever you want to call it. Nvidia's Maxwell architecture on the other hand cannot do it natively; it can only be emulated. And since you want as much future proofing as possible, I would recommend the Fury X.

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