m_f_ayyad_2008 :
Corwin65 :
m_f_ayyad_2008 :
i found 1.5years old gaming pc with
i7 920
amd fury x 4gb
1tb hdd
24gb ram ddr3
650w psu
and the price is half new i5 8600k pc with 16gb ddr4 ram and fury x gpu
this pc worth it ?? and can i run games at ultra for 1 more year ?
That CPU is from 2008. Where you are getting 1.5 years I do not know.
the cpu made in 2008 but first use was a 1.5 years ago and the gpu bought 2 month ago
First use 1.5 years ago? Still, it's a first generation i7 that is 10 years old now.
It will work to play games with a decent graphics card (GTX 900 or 1000 series or AMD equivalent) but there are other issues with such an old system, not just the CPU.
First, the motherboard is probably using SATA II, not SATA III, so even if you use an SSD in that system it will not perform at its maximum speed, but about half as fast. The PCIe slots are 2.0, not 3.0. Also, all the USB ports will most likely be 2.0, no 3.0 ports. And you already show that the RAM is DDR3, not DDR4.
Personally, I would buy the i5 8500K PC at twice the cost, as it will be much faster and be using SATA III, PCIe 3.0 slots, DDR4 RAM and have several USB 3.0 ports. The motherboard may even have an NVMe slot or two (if you buy the right system). But that's what I would do.
I currently own an old 2009 model Dell XPS with an i7 940 in it, so I know about how well it performs. It will play games but will not be anywhere near as fast or efficient as that i5 system. I used that computer up until I built a completely new system in January using an i7 8700K CPU running Windows 10 Pro off of a 512 GB NVMe SSD and using a GTX 1080 Ti 11GB video card. That computer is fast and I can run every game on maximum settings on my 1440p IPS monitor. To be fair, in my old computer I was using a GTX 1060 6GB video card and could only run on high settings, not maximum settings. But there's no way to overcome the slower performance of the old CPU, except with a faster current one.
Still, it's up to you. If you only plan to use that old system (no matter how long it has actually been used) for a short time (or maybe you don't care about current motherboards, NVMe SSD drives and other speed improvements) then go ahead, get that system. But, I would not invest in a very old system, personally. As I said, even the i5 8500K is much better.
If you want performance go with something current, but if you just want to get by and save money you can go for the old system. Just don't have regrets later knowing that you could have placed the money on a new system. That's my advice. Good luck!