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Multiple cards looks nice but if there's a lack of CF driver support in games you play then essentially you'll waste $300 on that second card. Up until about 2 months ago I was running two 780 6gb variants in SLI since 2014 and TBH the support for games is drastically less then what it was, some games will even perform worse with two cards then the one. That's why I usually recommend going with the single best GPU you can afford. Plus a single GPU will have less cables meaning cleaner look.

As far as the CPU cooler you can go with a decent cooler & motherboard but remember that Ryzen is pretty much limited to 3.9-4.0 so even with the best cooler you won't be able to achieve a higher OC due to voltage limits. Also overclocking on a good...
You don't need a AIO CPU cooler, I'd get rid of it and go with a R5 1600 using the stock AMD Wraith cooler. I'd then change the motherboard and skip on the 580 CF and go with a single better GPU (GTX 1080) since SLI/CF support isn't as good as it used to be. This also gives you a better balanced system for gaming if that's what your going for and its cheaper.


PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant

CPU: AMD - Ryzen 5 1600 3.2GHz 6-Core Processor ($197.19 @ SuperBiiz)
Motherboard: ASRock - AB350 Pro4 ATX AM4 Motherboard ($73.98 @ Newegg)
Memory: G.Skill - Flare X Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-3200 Memory ($0.00)
Storage: ADATA - Ultimate SU800 128GB 2.5" Solid State Drive ($0.00)
Storage: Western Digital - BLACK SERIES 2TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive ($0.00)
Video Card: Gigabyte - GeForce GTX 1080 8GB G1 Gaming Video Card ($523.99 @ SuperBiiz)
Case: Fractal Design - Meshify C ATX Mid Tower Case ($89.99 @ NCIX US)
Power Supply: EVGA - SuperNOVA G3 650W 80+ Gold Certified Fully-Modular ATX Power Supply ($89.99 @ NCIX US)
Total: $975.14
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2017-09-08 16:41 EDT-0400
 
Dont really want a stock cooler. I'd either purchase the Wraith Max for $55 or get the Water cooler since ill be pushing it insanely hard. I see where your saying to get the Ryzen 1600... Ill probably just get that CPU since there is a huge gap. Im kinda stuck on the RX 580 CF. They look really nice in an all AMD system. But to do this I need a X370 for multiple GPU's and its better for overclocking.... Im looking for a very clean build.
 
Multiple cards looks nice but if there's a lack of CF driver support in games you play then essentially you'll waste $300 on that second card. Up until about 2 months ago I was running two 780 6gb variants in SLI since 2014 and TBH the support for games is drastically less then what it was, some games will even perform worse with two cards then the one. That's why I usually recommend going with the single best GPU you can afford. Plus a single GPU will have less cables meaning cleaner look.

As far as the CPU cooler you can go with a decent cooler & motherboard but remember that Ryzen is pretty much limited to 3.9-4.0 so even with the best cooler you won't be able to achieve a higher OC due to voltage limits. Also overclocking on a good quality B350 will be just as good as a X370 so unless there's features you need on the x370 I would just save some money and get the B350.
 
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