G'day everyone,
First time builder here looking for a bit of clarity. I want to build a PC to start playing some games, particularly Rust at the moment. Been looking for a budgetish-mid level PC that will utilise some new parts and some second hand, to get that edge with price/performance. Guess I want the best of both worlds like everyone, a decent PC for low cost. I am in Australia btw.
Have been looking around patiently at CPU's, whichever one I get of course will change the other parts I intend on using based on what is compatible. The CPU's I'm most interested in are;
- i7 4930k
- i5-4690k All of these I can pick up 2nd hand for ~$200 AUD.
- i5 6500
- i5 6600k Going for $50-70 more.
I am interested in overclocking, but it is not a make or break decision. I just figure that it keeps me in the game longer as the parts get older. Obviously the 6500 doesn't OC unless I backdate a BIOS and get a 'Z' MoBo, which seems like a lot of hassle for a n00b.
What do people think? Trying to find a balance between using older parts that were more high end that can still compete potentially with the money thing and performance factor in 2017. Would love to hear any and all opinions.
First time builder here looking for a bit of clarity. I want to build a PC to start playing some games, particularly Rust at the moment. Been looking for a budgetish-mid level PC that will utilise some new parts and some second hand, to get that edge with price/performance. Guess I want the best of both worlds like everyone, a decent PC for low cost. I am in Australia btw.
Have been looking around patiently at CPU's, whichever one I get of course will change the other parts I intend on using based on what is compatible. The CPU's I'm most interested in are;
- i7 4930k
- i5-4690k All of these I can pick up 2nd hand for ~$200 AUD.
- i5 6500
- i5 6600k Going for $50-70 more.
I am interested in overclocking, but it is not a make or break decision. I just figure that it keeps me in the game longer as the parts get older. Obviously the 6500 doesn't OC unless I backdate a BIOS and get a 'Z' MoBo, which seems like a lot of hassle for a n00b.
What do people think? Trying to find a balance between using older parts that were more high end that can still compete potentially with the money thing and performance factor in 2017. Would love to hear any and all opinions.