Question First build

May 20, 2024
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Hi this is my first pc ever and I wanna make sure everything is working out well.
So the pc i mostly gonna be used for gaming, but also occasionally video editing as well as coding.
I have a 1080p monitor
I've already bought pc case, cpu and gpu, but the other parts is changable.
So what would you recommend i do, and does this build look good?
I was also wondering how to choose airflow for my pc.
Cpu: ryzen amd 5 7600x
Gpu: Amd radeon 6700xt
Pc case: nzxt flow 7
cpu cooler: Thermalright Peerless assasin 120 SE
Motherboard: MSI B650 GAMING PLUS WIFI ATX AM5
Ram: Corsair vengeance 32 GB (DDR5-6000)
SSD: Samunsung 990 pro 2 GB
PSU: Corsair RM750e (2023) 750 W 80+ gold certified fully mordular ATX power supply
 
I probably wouldn't pay the premium for a 990 Pro.

Right now looks like the next best deal is the WD SN850X and if you don't mind a lesser known brand, the Teamgroup MP44.

Unless you got lucky generally the 6750XT is cheaper than the 6700XT. And there is an argument to be made for the 7600 XT in that price range.

Everything else looks good.
 
Hi this is my first pc ever and I wanna make sure everything is working out well.
So the pc i mostly gonna be used for gaming, but also occasionally video editing as well as coding.
I have a 1080p monitor
I've already bought pc case, cpu and gpu, but the other parts is changable.
So what would you recommend i do, and does this build look good?
I was also wondering how to choose airflow for my pc.
Cpu: ryzen amd 5 7600x
Gpu: Amd radeon 6700xt
Pc case: nzxt flow 7
cpu cooler: Thermalright Peerless assasin 120 SE
Motherboard: MSI B650 GAMING PLUS WIFI ATX AM5
Ram: Corsair vengeance 32 GB (DDR5-6000)
SSD: Samunsung 990 pro 2 GB
PSU: Corsair RM750e (2023) 750 W 80+ gold certified fully mordular ATX power supply
It all works together. Just curious but what country are you located and what is your budget?
 
Hi this is my first pc ever and I wanna make sure everything is working out well.
My budget is around 1200 dollars.
The pc i mostly gonna be used for gaming, but also occasionally video editing as well as coding.
I have a 1080p monitor
I've already bought pc case, cpu and gpu, but the other parts is changeable.
Do you agree with the choices? And how can I make sure this works out and the pc can run?
Cpu: ryzen amd 5 7600x
Gpu: Amd radeon 6700xt
Pc case: nzxt flow 7
Case coolers: arctic p12 PWM PST 120 mm
cpu cooler: Thermalright Peerless assasin 120 SE
Motherboard: MSI B650 GAMING PLUS WIFI ATX AM5
Ram: Corsair vengeance 32 GB (DDR5-6000)
SSD: western digital black SN850X NVMe SSD M.2 2TB
PSU: Corsair RM750e (2023) 750 W 80+ gold certified fully modular ATX power supply
 
Only thing id change is the ram, same speed & latency, 6000 CL 30 or 32. I prefer Gskill, i think they have better quality control and binning process.

https://www.gskill.com/configurator

Another suggestion is using am5 thermal paste guard so you can properly spread paste everywhere without worrying it going where it shouldn't.

View: https://youtu.be/VlRG_1aaXZ0?si=yLtK0YAbV9v3jTTv
But you still think the corsair is fine right? It's because I can get the ram for only 60 dollars.
 
You only buy ram once in a long time so make it count. There are more ram issues involving Corsair than Gskill here. I used Corsair long time ago in a 2012 i7 920 system triple channel board, 3x 4gb ddr3 modules, two died within a few years. Bad luck?, maybe. Replaced those with Gskill, still fine to the time of retirement a couple of years ago. Ever since, every system built runs Gskill.
 
You might have a look at this thread. For a budget build you might look at Intel. If you wanted to save cash you could go to something like a cheap z690 board with ddr4 ram and say an i5 12600kf. Upgrade the gpu to something a little better. For example Newegg has the rx 6800 for 359 which is complete overkill for 1080p now, but you could even start messing with 1440p if you upgraded the monitor later. Plus with the Intel box similar to this you’d still be able to update to a faster 14th gen cpu.

https://forums.tomshardware.com/threads/upgrade-with-amd-ryzen-7600.3845923/#post-23272110