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Is this a good gaming desktop pc setup

tomtomgosatnav1

Honorable
Jan 18, 2014
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10,640
making my first gaming pc and was wondering if these parts would be good together and work together, first time, budget is around 1200 please suggest ways to improve

Motherboard: MSI Z87XGD65 GAMING

CPU: Intel Core i7 4770K Quad Core Retail CPU (Socket 1150, 3.50GHz

CPU Cooler: Corsair 120mm Hydro Series H80i Digital High Performance Rad All-In-One Liquid CPU Cooler
Graphics card: EVGA Nvidia GeForce GTX780 Superclocked ACX Cooler 3GB GDDR5 Graphics Card

RAM: Corsair CMZ8GX3M2A1600C9 Vengeance 8GB (2x4GB) DDR3 1600 Mhz CL9 XMP
Case: NZXT Technologies H2 Classic Silent Midtower Chassis CS-NT-H2-B

Power supply:
Cooler Master 720W 12V Silent Pro M2 720
Hard drive: Samsung HN-M101MBB 1TB 5400rpm SATA 2.5 inch

SSD: Samsung 840 EVO 120GB 2.5 inch Basic SATA Solid State Drive

Thanks and will mainly play BF4 and COD ghosts
 
Solution
The ACX cooler is a dual-fan cooler, which I believe tend to exhaust air in multiple directions. The stock cooler minimizes this by exchanging most of its air right out the case.

If you're just planning on using a single GPU, go for a multi-fan cooler, but in multi-GPU setups, they can cause issues, as one card can end up intaking the exhaust of another.

The single-fan reference cooler is likely best if you ever intend for a multi-card setup. They're also decently quiet when not on a large overclock. And if noise isn't a huge problem, you can still hit a 1.2GHz clock speed with the reference cooler, which places the 780 past the Titan.

Also, if you are ever going for a dual-GPU setup, you'll need a really good front panel fan setup...
The ACX cooler is a dual-fan cooler, which I believe tend to exhaust air in multiple directions. The stock cooler minimizes this by exchanging most of its air right out the case.

If you're just planning on using a single GPU, go for a multi-fan cooler, but in multi-GPU setups, they can cause issues, as one card can end up intaking the exhaust of another.

The single-fan reference cooler is likely best if you ever intend for a multi-card setup. They're also decently quiet when not on a large overclock. And if noise isn't a huge problem, you can still hit a 1.2GHz clock speed with the reference cooler, which places the 780 past the Titan.

Also, if you are ever going for a dual-GPU setup, you'll need a really good front panel fan setup, as the lack of side panel fans makes it harder to get cool air to the GPUs.
 
Solution