Will this Gaming PC build work? €925 Build

ProbePC

Honorable
Jul 13, 2015
7
0
10,510
Whats up, this is my first build, and while I've done a certain amount of research and come up with this build, I am not entirely sure about the compatibility of these parts and thought it best to run it by here first. This build totals to €924 (all parts from hardwareversand.de), and while I'm open to changing parts, ideally i'd like to keep the costs to below €1000. Will the CPU fan suffice? Is the power supply a suitable wattage? Does the case have suitable dimensions? Any help much appreciated, thanks.
CPU:
Intel i5-4460 (€186)
MoBo:
Gigabyte GA-H97-DH3, LA1150 ATX (€107)
PSU:
EVGA 500B, Bronze (€58)
GPU:
Sapphire Radeon R9 290 Tri-X OC (€302)
RAM:
2x4GB G. Skill kit RipJaws-X PC3-12800U CL9 (€57)
HDD:
WD Blue 1TB 6Gb/s (€54)
SSD:
Samsung SSD 850 EVO SATA 6Gb/s 120GB (€66)
CASE:
Corsair Carbide Series 100R, ATX (€48)
CPU FAN:
Cooler master Hyper 212 EVO (€33)

P.S. While I would be looking to play games such as battlefield 4 at 1080p it is not a requirement to max out graphic settings, also games such as CS:GO, and upcoming battlefront etc and I am not looking at getting editing software, purely for gaming. Thanks
 
Solution
The wattage rating of the PSU is only what is capable of delivering. Not the power it will actually consume. The total wattage it consumes is determined by the load of the system. And a better, bigger PSU can be more efficient than a smaller poorer one when it reaches its 80% rating and beyond.


Cheers for the reply. Would 650W be considered very large energy consumption? I was originally contemplating getting a higher wattage PSU, but do you reckon it also might be more feasible to downgrade the gfx card? Or would the 650W range be reasonable for a gaming computer? I suppose a greater wattage PSU adds to the future proofing also.
 
The wattage rating of the PSU is only what is capable of delivering. Not the power it will actually consume. The total wattage it consumes is determined by the load of the system. And a better, bigger PSU can be more efficient than a smaller poorer one when it reaches its 80% rating and beyond.
 
Solution