looking for gaming pc

Piero Ladhur

Honorable
Jul 12, 2013
83
0
10,630
would this be a good setup for £508 or 756.50 US Dollar

Computer Case Black ATX Tower Case
CPU AMD FX 6300 (6 x 3.5 GHZ) - (Free Hitman Sniper Challenge Game)
CPU Heatsink AMD Heatsink & Fan
Memory 8 GB 1333Mhz (1x8GB) - (DDR3)
Graphics Card ATI Radeon HD 7750 - 2 GB - (XFX) - (PCI-E) (FREE NEXUIZ GAME)
Motherboard Gigabyte GA-78LMT/USB3 (AMD 760G) - VGA/DVI/HDMI
Sound Card Motherboard Integrated HD Sound
Networking Motherboard Integrated Ethernet Lan (Broadband Ready)
Power Supply 700W PSU
CPU Compound Standard CPU Compound Supplied With Heatsink
Hard Drive #1 500 GB Seagate SATA-III HDD 7200 RPM 16MB
Optical Drive #1 Samsung 24x DVD/CD Re-Writer/Reader - Black - (SATA)
Operating System #1 Microsoft Windows 8 Standard 64 BIT (Genuine DVD & COA Included)

or do you think this is better:

http://www.pcworld.co.uk/gbuk/desktop-pc-monitors/desktop-pcs/desktop-pcs/lenovo-h520s-desktop-pc-19597876-pdt.html

Or could someone leave a good build in comments
id like to play bf3 any settings with good fps and be able to render c4d quite quickly and record too!
 
Solution
RAM = Random Access Memory

That just stores the data you have viewed recently so you won't have to load it again.
Its the GPU which renders the actual data.

Even if you have got 32 GB RAM along with Intel HD 4000 Graphics you would get crappy frame rates because GPU is weak.
RAM plays near to no role in video games.

As far as CPU matters, CPU is made for calculations. It can not handle the rendering video games demand. You would still get choppy frame rates.

I would never advise anyone to buy a prebuilt system from any of the manufacturers but buy the parts individually and get the system assembled. That way things stay cheap and everything can be upgraded with no problems.
The video card is too terrible for gaming.

This build is much better -

PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant / Benchmarks

CPU: AMD FX-6300 3.5GHz 6-Core Processor (£88.79 @ Aria PC)
Motherboard: ASRock 970 PRO3 ATX AM3+ Motherboard (£57.50 @ Amazon UK)
Memory: Corsair Vengeance 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR3-1600 Memory (£55.00 @ Ebuyer)
Storage: Seagate Barracuda 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive (£45.59 @ Aria PC)
Video Card: Gigabyte GeForce GTX 650 Ti Boost 2GB Video Card (£131.59 @ Scan.co.uk)
Case: NZXT Source 210 Elite (White) ATX Mid Tower Case (£37.32 @ Scan.co.uk)
Power Supply: XFX 550W 80 PLUS Bronze Certified ATX12V / EPS12V Power Supply (£49.86 @ Scan.co.uk)
Optical Drive: LG GH24NS95 DVD/CD Writer (£14.99 @ Amazon UK)
Total: £480.64
(Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available.)
(Generated by PCPartPicker 2013-07-12 10:25 BST+0100)

I do not think I can find anything better than this.
 
what about the lenovo one, is that any good as i has 8gb ram and 1tb of harddrive



 
Lenovo one has 4 GB RAM and 500 GB HDD. Both the things does not matter much when it comes to gaming as long as the RAM is higher than 4 GB.

The biggest flaw in that desktop is that it has no video card at all. I guess it runs on IGP (Integrated Graphics Processor).
 


the only problem i was thinking of is isnt it too small to add a gpu in ? becaue its pretty compact and what games could i play without addding a gpu as its got 8gb ram and is 3ghz 3mb processor
 
RAM = Random Access Memory

That just stores the data you have viewed recently so you won't have to load it again.
Its the GPU which renders the actual data.

Even if you have got 32 GB RAM along with Intel HD 4000 Graphics you would get crappy frame rates because GPU is weak.
RAM plays near to no role in video games.

As far as CPU matters, CPU is made for calculations. It can not handle the rendering video games demand. You would still get choppy frame rates.

I would never advise anyone to buy a prebuilt system from any of the manufacturers but buy the parts individually and get the system assembled. That way things stay cheap and everything can be upgraded with no problems.
 
Solution