After having a good talk with a few folks, I've decided to buy a gaming PC and build it myself. I have everything I need, including all of the necessary equipment and accessories. I don't want to buy anything from NVIDIA because of some of its controversial decisions, its drivers' poor performance on Linux, and its high price. I'm going full red (AMD). Keep in mind that I will not be using Windows on this PC at all and will be running Pop OS on it as my primary operating system. I am also buying all the parts from Bestbuy. My budget is not to go completely over $2000

Two questions

  1. Will everything work properly with all of the PC accessories I'm getting, and is there anything I should replace? (not including the CPU or GPU)
  2. Do you think it will be enough with three fans, or do I need five for extra cooling?

Everything is linked here: https://pcpartpicker.com/user/Crafted_104/saved/XcZCrH

The current price for everything is $1716.78

  • Beetle_O_Rourke
    ·
    6 months ago

    In my experience, the convenience of buying everything from one vendor is rarely worth it unless you are taking advantage of bundle discounts.

    The silicon is the same, and stock issues mean that you could easily end up paying $30+ premiums on every part.

    A 120mm AIO is only worth it for tiny PCs, they generally have cooling power a little worse than a high end air tower.

    For an x3d chip you would want 280mm or 360mm to have acceptable noise levels. Later in the day I can do some price hunting with the vendor set to Best Buy only.

    • crafted_104 [any]
      hexagon
      ·
      6 months ago

      I would definitely appreciate if you did some price hunting on Bestbuy. I'm trying to find the best parts and for the best price and performance for my Gaming PC. I'll definitely look around for a 280mm or 360mm x3d chip

      • Beetle_O_Rourke
        ·
        6 months ago

        https://pcpartpicker.com/list/nNDggB - All In-stock now Best-Buy prices

        Had to downgrade the GPU a bit due to stock issues, and a properly sized AIO was more than double the price than Amazon.

        I would really recommend waiting for a 7900GRE to come back in stock, it's usually less than $60 more, but is a pretty significant bump in performance due to the extra shader cores. 7800xt isn't bad, just is cheaper with a slightly worse perf/dollar ratio.

        Logitech had a much better priced wireless headset, but I'll reiterate my suggestion of mid-range wireless headphones from a brand such as AKG or Audio-Technica and a desktop mike such as the Blue Snowball offering much better sending and receiving fidelity.

        I made the call to swap the monitor to a curved 170hz 2K panel from MSI. It's subjective, and will be more demanding of the GPU, but going from 1080p to 1440p was like night and day for me. It's also about the same price.

        ThermalTake is a well reviewed brand, and their 750w fully modular offering was a little cheaper than the Corsair you initially had.

        After 6% sales tax this would be USD 1987.57 which is juuuuust under your $2000 budget. I personally think that using the thermal grease included with the AIO should probably be fine, as the $5.49 shipping on the $20 tube of thermal grease makes me edward-wtf

        • crafted_104 [any]
          hexagon
          ·
          6 months ago

          Thank you very much! I'll save as much money as possible and acquire all of these parts. I truly appreciate you helping me out here, and I hope to talk to you again!

          I'll be sure to wait for the 7900GRE to come back in stock!