Hi guys, I want to build a general use PC for home.
Only considering
AMD option.
What for: I will be gaming (and amateur messing around Unreal Engine 5), browsing, watching 100GB+ x265 movies as so on.
Budget: 1000-1500€. Less is more.
Priorities: 1st priority is build quality. Performance and everything else is secondary.
Must have: Must be Zen4 based.
I currently have this in mind:
CPU: 8 fast core processor seems to be enough for my needs. More cores would be a waste. Ryzen 7700X. 340-350€. For example:
https://www.skytech.lt/100100000591...reads-socket-am5-dezuteje-amd-n-p-602209.html
Should I consider 7800X3D? Considering, I will NOT have a high-end GPU (Radeon 7700XT at most! More likely 7600XT)
Motherboard: I want latest technologies (PCIe5, USB4, DDR5) and overall good quality components used. I also prefer to have as many BIOS options available as possible. So I'm thinking of ASUS Proart B650. 330€.
https://www.asus.com/motherboards-components/motherboards/proart/proart-b650-creator/
It also looks great! And the cost is not too high considering other AM5 boards.
GPU: I'll buy a used one (6600XT) FOR NOW and when they become available I play to buy a latest mid-range GPU (Radeon 7600 or something?)
RAM: 16Gb Kingston Fury 6000mhz cl36. 75€. Seems to be okay? Would later upgrade to 2x16Gb. https://www.skytech.lt/kf560c36bbe1...ddr5-cl36-dimm-fury-beast-black-p-608530.html
SSD: Would really prefer a Gen5 SSD but with the poor selection and heat issues I'm not sure if I shouldn't just take Samsung 990 Pro for ~130€.
Maybe I should just wait a month or two before building PC so more PCIe5 SSD options are available?
Case: Literally don't care. will buy something cheap&small for 20-50€. Not sure what's good/best for that price. Selection is huge.
PSU: Since I want the best (titanium), but don't really want to spend 300€, I'm willing to go for 2nd best (platinum) for 155€:
https://www.1a.lt/p/maitinimo-blokas-seasonic-prime-platinum-650w-650-w-135-mm/atr
I know it's still expensive but I really want a good one, it will make me feel good.
Cooling: Will either buy the 7700X with Wraith Prism included or buy a NH-L9a-AM5 or something else of good quality and small size. Should be enough for me. 50€.
https://www.amazon.de/-/en/Noctua-NH-L9a-AM5-Premium-Profile-Cooling/dp/B0BNL8ZM1T/
Total current price
without GPU: ~1130€.
Perhaps forum members here could advice on where price could be cut without hurting quality, or perhaps where quality could be improved, even at more expense? Again, quality is #1 priority. I really like the motherboard and PSU I chose so I would need really good arguments to change those options. They just seem best quality for the money in my eyes.
Also curious whether forum members think I should wait for Gen5 SSDs seeing I want latest tech?
Should I consider 7800X3D?
Should I go with Wraith Prism or Noctua NH-L9a-AM5?
CPU - 6 core non-X3D is DEFINITELY not holding back whatever GPU you'll choose. In this case your requirement is tied to your creative endeavors in UE5, so 6-8 core depending on how much you feel like spending, I would just calculate the per core cost and pick the cheaper one, but if you anticipate going more-than-amateur in any pro tools, 8 core might be great for cutting down render/compile time.
Cooling - too many good options, but given you're not gonna get a liquid cooled GPU setup in this budget, get a decent air cooler and call it a day.
Mobo - You specify for Zen4, so DDR5 is a given, I seriously doubt you
need PCIe5 and USB4, best just get a decent VRM board with enough USB ports. (checkout hardware unboxed YT for VRM of the boards) PCIe5 won't become useful for SSD perhaps in the useful lifetime of the system because NVME SSDs already have incredible sequential I/O, and random I/O is not improving, that and PCIe 5 SSD so far has just been overpriced and overheating. On consumer platform you won't have enough PCIe lanes for serious extension capabilities bar PCIe re-drivers.
ALL OTHER BOARDS HAVE AT LEAST PCIe 4.0!
GPU - current data predicts 7600 to be a sidegrade at best, saving up for a 6700xt/6800 may be much better as their L3 cache size handles 1440p/4k just fine.
RAM - currently zen4 have very weak DDR5 controller, I would suggest you to buy paired rather than add another stick later if you don't want potential BIG headaches. Frequency-wise anything >5400 won't hold you back and more won't make much difference, probably just settle for 5600 sticks.
SSD - Personally, I'd just buy the cheapest option with capacity I want, running TLC NAND and has DRAM buffer, may not be as fast in sequential but probably higher endurance. Samsung tax is real and again super doubting you need that 990PRO enough to justify price.
Case - is actually IMO much more important than what many first- second time builder think. It might be the only part you re-use in the next build! Good cases gives good airflow steadily and so reduce fan noise, is thicker steel panel so not feel like fragile baby, good cable management smooth out building process etc. And where other parts are best working and not getting looked at, the case is looked at everyday. Get something that suits your taste - seriously.
PSU - 80+ rating has no correlation with power output characteristics such as ripple, noise, transience suppression, safety features, EMI supression etc. Check out PSU reviews from TPU (many done by Aris who also have youtube channel hardware busters). As a rule of thumb a Corsair RM or RMx won't fault you, and is widely available at decent prices.
It sounds like you want a PC to boast/feel good about compared to your friends whose buying slightly overpriced pretty RGB prebuilts. If that is the case, please don't take pride in tech enthusiast circle brainwashing of knowing all the jargons "to buy the best computer parts", all of this is to encourage you to consume/spend needlessly, while also making you look stupid for people buying things for doing things rather than as a hobby. You can run UE5 just fine with any hexa-core circa coffee lake era, hardware is the easy bit. Likewise PCIe5 and USB4 is more marketing one-upping one-another. Let me know how you plan to saturate the potential ~15GB/s bandwidth of the x4 lane connected directly to CPU. Are you doing 10gig home networking? Are you running RAID arrays to ingest huge amount of data? Are you bifurcating to many devices to support your now-professional connectivity needs? Do you have a bunch of thunderbolt devices laying around? USB4 SSDs then? All sound too far fetched, maybe you should consider these for future builds should you come to need those.
Oh and the less RGB the better. FUCK WIRING RGBS