Welcome to our inaugural pc gaming builds of the month! Every month we're going to piece together hardware setups for those interested in upgrading their machines.
- These builds have been put together by us using our experience in the PC space and by comparing hardware using available third-party benchmarks.
- Our goal is to get you as much bang for your buck as possible when it comes to gaming.
- We are going to build a high-end system for both Intel and AMD alongside two builds in the $1200 and $700 price tiers.
- Price tiers assume you already have peripherals and are accurate as of posting.
- If you're interested in playing WoW Classic, you'll have a blast even on the $700 / Rare build.
All Amazon links on this page are affiliate links.
PS. Don't forget your USB Flash Drive to install Windows. A 32 GB SanDisk Ultra works great! You'll want to use Rufus to make it bootable.
PC Accessories
We're starting things off with accessories for your build. Need a new keyboard, mouse, or headset? We got you covered.
- Keyboard Corsair K65 RGB Mechanical Cherry MX Red $80
- Keyboard Corsair K70 RGB Mechanical Cherry MX Red $120
- Mouse Logitech G502 HERO $52
- Mouse Razer DeathAdder Elite $40
- Headsets HyperX Cloud II $88
- Headsets HyperX Cloud Flight Wireless $120
- Headphones ATH-M50x $140
- Microphone Antlion Audio ModMic 5 $70
- Microphone Blue Yeti USB Mic $108
- Mousepad Razer Goliathus Speed (Large) $20
- Mousepad Razer Goliathus Control (Extended) $35
- Mousepad Razer Invicta Aluminum $60
- Monitor ASUS VG245H 24" 75hz 1ms $190
- Monitor ASUS VG278Q 27" 144hz 1ms $270
- Case CM MasterBox Pro 5 RGB $95
- Case NZXT H700 $141
- Case Phanteks Enthoo Evolv X $200
- Case CORSAIR Carbide SPEC-Omega $160
The Legendary Build - High-End Intel & AMD Builds
Our first two builds are for Team Blue and Team Red. The setup stays the same for both builds with only the CPU and Motherboards changing. If you want to build with Ryzen and plan on content creation and streaming, you may want to buy a 3900X instead for the extra performance, though it is definitely not required.
Intel has recently price-dropped their CPUs to remain competitive with the new AMD chip, really showcasing the pressure team red gave them. Both builds will give you very similar performance with Intel pushing slightly ahead in gaming due to higher clocks. AMD really shines when it comes to multi-threaded workloads with its 16 threads compared to Intel's 8 which can help if you're interested in streaming. You'll be quick to notice the AMD system is slightly more expensive than our Intel friend, due to the increased motherboard price. This is thanks to ASRock having a rock-solid board on the blue side that is known for great quality and stability with overclocking while being on the cheap side. If you want to upgrade the memory, just buy two kits!
Do note that these computers, unlike our Rare and Epic tier builds, do not have cases pre-selected. We'll leave that choice up to you!
- CPU Intel Core i7-9700K $340
- MOBO ASRock Z390 Phantom Gaming 9 $249
- CPU AMD Ryzen 7 3700X $340
- MOBO Gigabyte X570 AORUS Master $360
- GPU EVGA 2080 Ti FTW3 Ultra $1400
- RAM HyperX Predator 32GB 3200 RGB $203
- PSU Corsair RM70x Gold $130
- Cooler CORSAIR H100i RGB PLATINUM 240mm $140
- SSD Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB $220
- HDD 2TB WD Black $106
The Epic Build - $1200 Tier
We're going big with an RTX 2070 and a current-generation Ryzen 5 processor which will let you push high framerates and give you plenty of overhead for streaming if you desire.
- CPU AMD Ryzen 5 3600X $239
- MOBO Gigabyte X570 GAMING X $164
- GPU EVGA GeForce RTX 2070 8 GB $480
- RAM Corsair Vengeance LPX 16 GB $70
- PSU CM MWE Gold 550 W 80+ Gold $70
- SSD WD Black NVMe 1 TB $155
- Case Cooler Master MB600L ODD $50
If you're looking for some upgrades to the setup, you can double your memory by purchasing a second kit, or put in some magnetic storage for all your files that don't need really fast access with a 2TB WD Black for $106. An AMD Ryzen 7 3700X is also a nice upgrade for only $110 and it'll give you 2 extra cores (4 threads) for all that content creation your heart desires. A cooler upgrade with a Hyper 212 Evo at $35 is also not a bad investment to keep your CPU a bit cooler.
The Rare Build - $700 Tier
By using a mix of current and last-generation hardware, we're able to make a fantastic entry-level build that is even capable of streaming some titles, though you may need to lower some of your in-game settings to do so.
- CPU AMD Ryzen 5 2600 $129
- MOBO MSI B450 Tomahawk $115
- GPU EVGA GeForce GTX 1660 6GB $230
- RAM Corsair Vengeance LPX 16 GB $70
- PSU EVGA 500 BT, 80+ Bronze, 500W $40
- SSD WD Blue M.2 500GB $65
- Case Cooler Master MB600L ODD $50
If you want to save some additional money, you can get by on 8 GB of RAM instead, but the extra $30 is well worth the hundreds of Chrome tabs you want want to leave open in the background. More graphical performance can be had for an extra $60 by upgrading to the Nvidia 1660 Ti, though and extra $110 instead can close to double your performance and unlock hardware-level raytracing in Minecraft by upgrading to an RTX 2060 for $340. A cooler upgrade with a Hyper 212 Evo at $35 is also not a bad investment to keep your CPU cooler.
Thanks for joining us for our first ever Build of the Month!
Comments
Nice article! i didnt knew about this 'till your last giveaway!
I just built a new pc so this is not really applicable to me personally, but I love the fact you are willing to give this advice and spend the time to write this article. This will help a lot of people out there who are interested in upgrading. This article is just another in a series of extraordinary content. Keep up the incredible work!
When you are buying a PC component don't forget to check https://www.userbenchmark.com/
It helped me a lot to decide which component should I buy. You can compare parts side-by-side. Also you can see how they perform together with your other components..
Don’t forget the CPU coolers.
The $1200 and $700 builds both come with a cooler in the box that will suffice. I already recommended below the build an upgrade to the Hyper 212 Evo which will improve cooling performance.
Yet an other detailed and useful guide ; The content creation is on point!
This is unexpected, but interesting nonetheless
a surprise to be sure, but a welcomed one
I certainly never expected this to show up, but I love it.
Well, with Hearthstone and MTG being so light on hardware requirements it is a bit surprising to see such articles here, but hey, it's always good to get updated! Since I play almost exclusively HS I don't visit hardware sites anymore, so it's nice to get some information here.
I'd like to see (at least from time to time) a slim/SFF build, not specially powerful, but small, silent and elegant. It should be enough to play HS (maybe even streaming to twitch) while not hurting your wallet and keeping your desk clean and elegant. It could be a Common build or even a Rare alternative, as silent and small components are sometimes expensive.
I agree that the hardware requirements are quite low. I only play HS and a few older games. My 10 year old hardware (FX 4300, Nvidia 560ti, 8gb ddr3) are still going strong. But I am a Linux user and hardware tends to last a long time with Linux.
Fully agree that a Small Form Factor build would be an excellent addition! Definitely could part together a couple of different configurations for them, having a more budget option and something more high-end.
Personally, I'm a huge fan of small pcs, I've just never really found a case I really, really loved that pushed me over the edge to build one. I'm really hoping I can build one of these beasts to use as my main rig at some point though. M.2 form factor has really helped us minimize the amount of space one needs for drives in the build, making them even smaller.
RGB ram and cooler? Way overpriced, and the Rx 5700 xt is way better than the 2070 for less money.
There are definitely alternatives if you don't want RBG. That's what a lot of the market wants right now though and its the reason why it was included in the higher end builds.
RX 5700 XT is still very new and I don't feel comfortable recommending it when you consider AMD has basically started from the ground up again and they are not the easiest cards to get your hands on. It is much like how I wouldn't recommend Gen 1 Ryzen when it first launched. It was one hell of an appealing product at the price, but then we saw issues with certain memory configurations and other fun bios things that needed to be patched on most of the board partners. Plus, streaming was mentioned in the build and honestly, Nvidia just performs better in that realm right now with their upgraded NVENC implementation across their 2000 series cards, taking some pressure off the CPU. If they end up being solid though, I could definitely see us recommending it in the coming months based off preliminary benchmarks.
Kudos for making these.
Love it. I'm always poking around for PC builds I could afford, since I'm long overdue for an upgrade.
i'd be interested in seeing laptops. I know, not necessarily a "build-your-own" but they have plenty of swappable components
I wish there were more swappable components on laptops. A lot of them these days don't even allow you to swap out the damn SSD, making it a brick at some point ='(
If we do end up recommending laptops down the line, which is something we'd love to do, we want to make sure we have a really good reason for doing so and take the proper amount of time to really figure out which ones are the best in all the different price tiers. Glad to see some love for laptops though!
Trying something new which fits some of our interests on the team while giving you fantastic people content that can help support keeping the site lights online and helping you find new hardware to upgrade.
Is this something you'd like to see continued? Are there other types of hardware you'd like to see spotlighted? What about reviewed? Let me know what you think.
Gotta say, I really didn’t expect to see this article. Really am loving how much you guys are experimenting with new content for the site
Yeah, Hearthstone isn't that demanding of a game, but it's never bad to upgrade. This is honestly one of the better hardware/software spreads I have seen, clean and concise without throwing random tech jargon to make it sound more credible. I especially appreciate the inclusion of different tiers.