Building a new gaming pc

tharun2001

Commendable
Jul 25, 2016
4
0
1,510
I AM PLANNING TO BUILD A NEW GAMING PC..I AM PLANNING TO BUY THESE
THINGS TO BUILD MY PC..
1) INTEL 3240
2) H 81 GIGABYTE MOTHERBOARD
3) 6 GB DDR3 Ram
4) 450 W SMPS
5) 500GB HARD DISK
6) GTX 1050 2 GB GRAPHICS CARD..
IF I BUILD A PC WITH THIS SPEC..WILL EVERYTHING SUPPORT WITH
EVERYTHING...WILL DDR3 RAM SUPPORT WITH GRAPHICS CARD..IF IT WONT
WORK LET ME KNOW PLEASE AS SOON AS..GUYS PLEASE HELP ME ITS MY FIRST BUILD..SO...IF SOMETHING DOESNT SUPPORT WITH SOMETHING..PLEASE TELL ME .
 
Solution
There's one compatibility problem, and a couple choice ones:

1) The CPU and motherboard are not compatible. The CPU uses the LGA 1155 socket, the motherboard has an LGA 1150 one.

2) 6GB is too little for a modern gaming rig unless you plan to limit yourself to sub-triple A games. The standard is 8GB.

3) The PSU (power supply unit) should not be chosen dismissively. Remember, it provides power to your components, a bad unit could provide too much power and fry something, or even cause subtle long-term damage by providing unstable power. The minimum I'd recommend is a Seasonic S12II or XFX TS unit.

Suggestion: Check local pricing for a Pentium G4620, H270/B250 motherboard, and 8GB of DDR4 RAM and see if it's acceptable. The Pentium...
There's one compatibility problem, and a couple choice ones:

1) The CPU and motherboard are not compatible. The CPU uses the LGA 1155 socket, the motherboard has an LGA 1150 one.

2) 6GB is too little for a modern gaming rig unless you plan to limit yourself to sub-triple A games. The standard is 8GB.

3) The PSU (power supply unit) should not be chosen dismissively. Remember, it provides power to your components, a bad unit could provide too much power and fry something, or even cause subtle long-term damage by providing unstable power. The minimum I'd recommend is a Seasonic S12II or XFX TS unit.

Suggestion: Check local pricing for a Pentium G4620, H270/B250 motherboard, and 8GB of DDR4 RAM and see if it's acceptable. The Pentium G4620 features hyperthreading, so it can easily compete with i3s.
 
Solution