Grunker
07-07-2008, 02:37 PM
Hi there!
I'm currently looking at new computers, as my old one can no longer play the newest games. When I upgrade, I want a pretty awesome computer, which is to say "very good," but without crashing all my accounts. The standard I'm looking for is a computer able to play such games as Mass Effect, The Witcher, Bioshock and similar stuff, at highest graphics, and I'd also like to be able to play games coming out the next year at high graphics. The computer should be able to survive and be able to play games for at least three years, maybe five if you count adding and changing components (but obviously, if it runs five, it won't have to do it at high graphics). My question is, if the computer I'm currently looking at will make me able to do this, and besides that, general comments about the specs on the computer. I understand a good deal technical talk, but I'm unable to discern the effects of, for example, the mainboard, just by looking at its name or looking it om at a hardware guide. The computer will not be used for making music or multimedia, just gaming and work. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I have done some research on Tom's Hardware Guide, but I'm a poor student, and I'd really like to know what I'm buying is worth the cash before I make a final purchase.
Since I'm asking you to help me, I thought it might be a courtesy to add my thoughts on each component, so you can determine what I'm looking after, but feel free to ignore them and just comment on the components as you see fit.
Again, thanks for any help you might offer.
The computer I'm currently thinking about buying:
CPU: Intel Core 2Quad Q9450 2.6GHz 12mb S-775
I'm unsure whether to purchase this or to buy the 2.8GHz version. The price is significantly higher though, so if the benefit is fairly small, I'd much rather purchase the 2.6GHz one.
Mainboard: ASUS P5N-D nForce 750i SLI S-775
Now, as I understand it, the mainboard is the basis of alot of other stuff. In comparison to the rest of my components, will this mainboard suffice?
RAM: 4GB DDR2 PC8500 1066MHz Corsair Twin (2x2GB)
This seems sufficient, from what I know.
Graphics Card: 512MB GeForce 8800GT DDR3 PCI-E
Now, as I understand it, the RAM on the graphics card ain't what's important anymore, but that's the only way I know how to judge a Graphics Card. I did some research at Tom's Hardware Guide, and it had some good things to say about this card.
Sound Card: Creative SB XtremeGamer Fatality Pro:
This step is VERY important for me. I love good sound, and I'm using a Dolby Surround 5.1 system. I know the cheaper Creative X-FI Xtreme Music might do well enough for me, but I'm not sure. If I wouldn't be able to tell a difference of course, I'd rather go with the cheap one.
Harddisk: 250GB Samsung 7200rpm SATA2
Space isn't that important for me, I'm not in the habit of downloading TONS of stuff from the internet.
Cabinet Cooling: 80mm Arctic Cooling AF8025 PWM 12dB-21dB
Don't know how important Cabinet Cooling is today. Last time I bought a computer, Graphics Cards didn't even have fans. It's not that expensive though.
PSU-upgrade: Inter-Tech SL-500 120mm
Don't know that much about PSUs.
CPU Cooler: Arctic Cooling Alpine 7 S-775
Again, don't know much about cooling systems.
DVD: 48x16x Lite-On DVD
Good enough, I guess.
DVD-burner: 20x Lite-On DVD/RW DL Light Scribe
I honestly don't know whether this'll be able to write CDs also. Will it?
I'm going to run with Windows XP as operating system.
Thanks in advance, Casper.
NB: If I left something out, or if you'll need further information if you are to help me, just say so :)
I'm currently looking at new computers, as my old one can no longer play the newest games. When I upgrade, I want a pretty awesome computer, which is to say "very good," but without crashing all my accounts. The standard I'm looking for is a computer able to play such games as Mass Effect, The Witcher, Bioshock and similar stuff, at highest graphics, and I'd also like to be able to play games coming out the next year at high graphics. The computer should be able to survive and be able to play games for at least three years, maybe five if you count adding and changing components (but obviously, if it runs five, it won't have to do it at high graphics). My question is, if the computer I'm currently looking at will make me able to do this, and besides that, general comments about the specs on the computer. I understand a good deal technical talk, but I'm unable to discern the effects of, for example, the mainboard, just by looking at its name or looking it om at a hardware guide. The computer will not be used for making music or multimedia, just gaming and work. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I have done some research on Tom's Hardware Guide, but I'm a poor student, and I'd really like to know what I'm buying is worth the cash before I make a final purchase.
Since I'm asking you to help me, I thought it might be a courtesy to add my thoughts on each component, so you can determine what I'm looking after, but feel free to ignore them and just comment on the components as you see fit.
Again, thanks for any help you might offer.
The computer I'm currently thinking about buying:
CPU: Intel Core 2Quad Q9450 2.6GHz 12mb S-775
I'm unsure whether to purchase this or to buy the 2.8GHz version. The price is significantly higher though, so if the benefit is fairly small, I'd much rather purchase the 2.6GHz one.
Mainboard: ASUS P5N-D nForce 750i SLI S-775
Now, as I understand it, the mainboard is the basis of alot of other stuff. In comparison to the rest of my components, will this mainboard suffice?
RAM: 4GB DDR2 PC8500 1066MHz Corsair Twin (2x2GB)
This seems sufficient, from what I know.
Graphics Card: 512MB GeForce 8800GT DDR3 PCI-E
Now, as I understand it, the RAM on the graphics card ain't what's important anymore, but that's the only way I know how to judge a Graphics Card. I did some research at Tom's Hardware Guide, and it had some good things to say about this card.
Sound Card: Creative SB XtremeGamer Fatality Pro:
This step is VERY important for me. I love good sound, and I'm using a Dolby Surround 5.1 system. I know the cheaper Creative X-FI Xtreme Music might do well enough for me, but I'm not sure. If I wouldn't be able to tell a difference of course, I'd rather go with the cheap one.
Harddisk: 250GB Samsung 7200rpm SATA2
Space isn't that important for me, I'm not in the habit of downloading TONS of stuff from the internet.
Cabinet Cooling: 80mm Arctic Cooling AF8025 PWM 12dB-21dB
Don't know how important Cabinet Cooling is today. Last time I bought a computer, Graphics Cards didn't even have fans. It's not that expensive though.
PSU-upgrade: Inter-Tech SL-500 120mm
Don't know that much about PSUs.
CPU Cooler: Arctic Cooling Alpine 7 S-775
Again, don't know much about cooling systems.
DVD: 48x16x Lite-On DVD
Good enough, I guess.
DVD-burner: 20x Lite-On DVD/RW DL Light Scribe
I honestly don't know whether this'll be able to write CDs also. Will it?
I'm going to run with Windows XP as operating system.
Thanks in advance, Casper.
NB: If I left something out, or if you'll need further information if you are to help me, just say so :)