Even a rough estimate would be niceI'm just going to spend my summer saving up after highschool so its only a matter of time really...
Even a rough estimate would be niceI'm just going to spend my summer saving up after highschool so its only a matter of time really...
sorry about that lolEven a rough estimate would be nice
Thats tough give me a bit you're gonna just game right? No graphics design or photoshop stuff right?I'm trying to keep between a $400-$600 range
I'm doing an edited build of @TotalInsanity4 's build600 is pushing it, this is what im at so far http://pcpartpicker.com/p/Q3RhsY the power supply and board are bad (not bad bad just there a far better options for a little more) but is trusted and the case is meh but im still missing a CPU that I would try to buy used but theres almost no way around the price point scratching my head a bit.
If your gonna do gaming I would stay away from AMD but thats just my opinionI'm doing an edited build of @TotalInsanity4 's build
Naw. I have a 500gb SSD and I love it. Trying to keep track of which programs are where, having programs autoinstall to the wrong drive, it's all a pain in the ass.It doesn't really work that way.
And I just checked your SSD, god damn. $200? You should get a small SSD for your OS and your frequently used programs/games and get a HDD for other stuff. Check these out: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822236339
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=9SIA6BM3572949
Unless you have a raid 0 setup having a single SSD is a waste but whatever floats your boat ¯\_(ツ)_/¯Naw. I have a 500gb SSD and I love it. Trying to keep track of which programs are where, having programs autoinstall to the wrong drive, it's all a pain in the ass.
When you're on a tight budget (in this case, we are) there's no point in spending $200 on a big SSD. 500GB by itself is nothing, and a cheap 1TB or bigger HDD would be rather useful.Naw. I have a 500gb SSD and I love it. Trying to keep track of which programs are where, having programs autoinstall to the wrong drive, it's all a pain in the ass.
Now you've got 2 HDD. Either change the small one for a small SDD or just remove it. To be honest, at that budget, having an SSD won't give much advantage, pretty much just slightly faster boot times, so you could just make do with the 1TB HDD. And if you're going to go Radeon for the GPU, that one performs a bit worse than the GTX 960, so keep that in mind.
The CPU will bottleneckhttp://pcpartpicker.com/user/YamiRioru/saved/Q96kcf
check out this case with a full sized gtx 960 in a compact case for a price below $700