Slowly building gaming PC. Ryzen 5 2400g or RX560 or GTX 1050 for better vfm?

eftaps

Prominent
Dec 30, 2017
23
0
510
Hey all,

The new desktop Ryzen APUs are almost here and i am in big dilemma on how to proceed with all this crazy pricing in GPUs that seem to be getting even worse in 2018.

My current options if i buy a GPU that i can afford are:
a) Gigabyte Radeon RX 560 2GB for 131 euros.
b) Gigabyte GeForce GTX1050 2GB Windforce OC for 146 euros.
c) Palit GeForce GTX1050 Ti 4GB Dual OC for 178 euros.

All 3 GPUs come with a 6-pin power supply connector so they can be better overclocked and achieve more value from the GPU and with 2 fans for lower noise and better temperatures.

So if i go and buy today a GPU i am stuck with a low end GPU and CPU and i will probably have to upgrade both sooner or later, probably starting with the CPU, so i guess it will be better to buy the cheapest one on the list; the RX-550. Will the 1050 Ti give nice performance in games in 2019 paired with a zen+ or zen2 CPU? My guess is not so much, a 1060 or 1070 will boost performance by far with the newer and much better CPU and GPU prices will be much better than today (at least i hope they will :p).

But there is a completely different approach! Maybe i can just upgrade the CPU to a Ryzen 5 2400g. It's iGPU won't be as good as an RX-560 which is the cheapest on my list, but at least i will have decent graphics for now (at only around 180 euros) and a much better processor than the one i currently have (plus the fact that my ram will run at 3000MHz which is supported with Ryzen according to my mobo QVL).

If i buy this APU i will have time to raise more money for a 1060 and maybe even see the prices drop around summer-autumn in GPUs.

Well there is catch here i think. I am concerned that i will be stuck with a CPU with only 4 cores/8 threads and with only 6MB L2/L3 cache, in comparison to a 1st gen ryzen 5 1600 that has 6 cores/12 threads and and 3 times more L2/L3 cache (3/16Mb) at the same price. So i am afraid that my GPU will be bottlenecked by the Ryzen 5 2400g and i will end up needing to upgrade the CPU as well in 2019.

I am trying to find the best futureproofing scenario with the minimum money spent but it's very hard given all those factors. I will try to resell anything i upgrade, but the resell value often is not that good, so let's leave it out of the equation.

Any ideas?


Current computer setup:
amd a8-9600, asus prime a320m-k, 2*4GB corsair vengeance LPX DDR4 3000MHz
(currently running at 2133MHz), Corsair CX500 PSU
 

BaRoMeTrIc

Honorable
Jan 30, 2017
164
16
10,715
Get the gtx 1050 and weather the storm until you can find a better gpu, don't buy an apu and then realize the performance is horrible. better off buying a ryzen 5 1400 and pairing it with a gtx 1050. you can sell it after for a small loss and buy a 1060 or so
 
The only real reason to buy an APU is because you will be using the included onboard graphics. If your plan, at any point, involves buying a videocard then DO NOT buy an APU. You trade performance for lower cost when you buy an APU. If you then go ahead and spend more money on a videocard, you have defeated the one benefit an APU offers and now you are stuck with a slower APU instead of a faster CPU.
 

eftaps

Prominent
Dec 30, 2017
23
0
510
IMO, it looks like a better plan to buy an APU if we take account of after selling the individual components (cpu and/or gpu) and the time factor.
If i start by buying the ryzen 5 2400g i will pay 180€ for it minus 40-45€ for selling my a8-9600 (starting price now 55€ new) which sums up to 135-140€. Trying to sell the a8-9600 later will be much harder and probably i will have to give it away even cheaper. If i wait long enough (until lets say summer-autumn 2018), hopefully, i can get a gtx 1060 for about 200€ or even less, so the total will be around 340€. The cpu will surely be worse compared to a ryzen 5 1600 or even worse the newer zen+ models, but it will be sufficient i guess for 1080p gaming in 2018-2019.

On the other hand if buy an rx560 (cheapest choice, better vfm) i will pay 130€ for it and probably another 180€ for a zen+ cpu with the specs of ryzen 5 1600 (6c/12t, 16mb L3 cache). Assuming that i will sell my current a8-9600 apu at a later point i will get around 30€ back, so the total is 280€. The processor will be more than enough for many years, but i will have to upgrade my gpu by the end of the year. Let's say that i can get a gtx 1060 for 170€ (less than estimated before as this will be bought a few months later, around winter 2018) and i can sell my old rx560 for about 70€. This will make the final cost around 380€, which is 40€ more than the 1st upgrade path.

Considering the fact that the ryzen 5 2400g can not severely bottleneck (at least i assume by comparing it with a ryzen 5 1400) a gtx 1060 and the fact that i will have to sell one less component in the after market, so less hassling, it seems that the 1st option is still viable and maybe better. And even if i need to sell the ryzen 5 2400g at some point in the aftermarket, i don't think that it will be that hard to actually sell it, or the price too low. Also keep in mind that i live in greece, so the prices are a little higher here and something like amazon is not really a good option.

(if only i knew the recommended specs for the upcoming Anthem...)