Question What change should I make first ?

Feb 25, 2025
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I have an AMD Ryzen 1600 CPU and a GTX 1660 Ti 6GB GPU and I want to buy an AMD Ryzen 7 5700X.
Is that a good option with my GPU ?
 
Why do you want to make a change?

Reason: problems, performance, future growth?

Update your post to include full system hardware specs and OS information.

PSU: make, model, wattage, age, condition (original to build, new, used, refurbished)?

Disk drive(s): make, model, capacity, how full?

Attached peripherals?
 
My config (6 years old, only used to play games):

Motherboard: Asus B450M Gaming
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 1600 3.2Ghz
GPU: GTX 1660 6Gb
PSU: Corsair ATX 600w
RAM: 2 x 8GB 2666Mhz DDR4

I want to change because the fps in games is very low at the moment.
 
I agree with the CPU suggestions if you’re going to be using this system for a while yet, but I’d look into what is causing the low fps first.

Could be the GPU because I kind of doubt your CPU is too slow to hold that 1660 back much if at all.

In that case a new GPU would be a better place to start replacing stuff but that would also be reason to look at the PSU because it’s more than 5 years old and newer GPUs use a lot of power.

Anyway try to find out how high the gpu and cpu utilization is in the games you play so you can replace the part that is causing the low fps first.
 
I have an AMD Ryzen 1600 CPU and a GTX 1660 Ti 6GB GPU and I want to buy an AMD Ryzen 7 5700X.
Is that a good option with my GPU ?
The AMD Ryzen 7 5700X is a solid upgrade from the Ryzen 1600, offering better performance in gaming and multitasking. However, with a GTX 1660 Ti, you may not see a significant improvement in gaming performance since the GPU could become the bottleneck. If you plan to upgrade your GPU later, the 5700X is a great choice. Make sure your motherboard supports the 5700X with a BIOS update. If gaming is your primary focus, consider balancing your upgrade by getting a better GPU instead.
 
Zen 1 had latency performance issues, its main selling point was being the first affordable 8-core chip. Upgrading to Zen 3 seems like a good idea regardless.
If this system will be in use for a few more years and will get a better GPU too I’m totally with you, if it’s just a quick fix to get some more fps before getting a new build in a year or two then I don’t see it helping much.