That specific one comes out to around $450. It looks to be about a $2500 rig (almost $1000 of that just being SSD storage). Honestly not too bad for a high end computer. I saved up and bought myself one like that and I'm just a pizza guy. I also use my computer a lot though and it'll last me at least a decade.
It's probably still overkill lol. I only upgraded because a family member wanted my old one and I basically got a 50% discount on a new one with how much they paid me. That one was an fx-8350 with a 290x I think? Solid rig even up until I sold it.
I messed around with overclocking, then quickly realized that a 5% performance bump is not necessary and comes at the cost of component lifespan and power consumption. Stock is always more than enough (unless it's like a core 2 duo or something).
That heavily depends on the processor and application. Back in the DDR3 days, you could easily see a 50% higher frame rate from an overclock. Even now gpu overclocking has similar results, although it's a bit more involved.
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That specific one comes out to around $450. It looks to be about a $2500 rig (almost $1000 of that just being SSD storage). Honestly not too bad for a high end computer. I saved up and bought myself one like that and I'm just a pizza guy. I also use my computer a lot though and it'll last me at least a decade.
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It's probably still overkill lol. I only upgraded because a family member wanted my old one and I basically got a 50% discount on a new one with how much they paid me. That one was an fx-8350 with a 290x I think? Solid rig even up until I sold it.
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My current one has a 5700xt in it and it's solid. Can run everything on max at 100+ fps most of the time (on a refurbished 1440p monitor)
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I messed around with overclocking, then quickly realized that a 5% performance bump is not necessary and comes at the cost of component lifespan and power consumption. Stock is always more than enough (unless it's like a core 2 duo or something).
You don't even notice over clocking. It's just nerd number wars
That heavily depends on the processor and application. Back in the DDR3 days, you could easily see a 50% higher frame rate from an overclock. Even now gpu overclocking has similar results, although it's a bit more involved.