DarkLordOtaku
Member
No such thing as "free advice."Same. I want to see OP cosplaying as Falco Lombardi wearing Sephiroth's clothes.
We'll collect our due. Of that you can be certain.
No such thing as "free advice."Same. I want to see OP cosplaying as Falco Lombardi wearing Sephiroth's clothes.
In my experience, most games use between 14 - 18GB of DRAM with the settings I mentioned, which is why I recommend 24GB.
A graphics card with 12GB of VRAM is sufficient for current games, as they typically use between 8 - 10GB, especially in XBOX Mode, which reduces RAM usage.
With this combination, you get a next-gen experience comparable to current consoles at a relatively reasonable price.
I would start with a more casual friendly Steam Machine over a Windows OS PC.
Get used to that and then in a couple years if you need more power go PC.
But it can be a headache even to those who know how to manage it.If Steam machine was 1/2 the price it is I would agree. I have faith that OP can operate Windows it's not rocket science.
That's not how it works... A PC needs this much DRAM. You could choose just 16GB—it will usually be enough—but more is better.Favoring DRAM over VRAM is just not a good idea, imo.
Oh but you need the highest your card can muster for VR, especially if you're modding Unreal Engine 5 games, for that I would recommend an RTX 5080 at the minimum.I live in Sweden unfortunately...
I dont need to play in the highest resolution, dont want to play in lowest either, maybe mid just above mid of that answer your question![]()
The PC is well balanced overall and should deliver excellent gaming performance. I would just make sure the RAM is DDR5-6000 CL30 with EXPO, and if the price difference is small, consider a Crucial T500, WD Black SN850X, or Samsung 990 Pro instead of the Crucial P510 SSD. But those are just minor tweaks, though.Inputs?
Let me get this straight and simple, gen 9 started with Series X and PS5 at $499.99 and at that time, it'll cost you more than $1,000 to build something as strong, back forward to the future, Helix at $1,200 and PS6 around $950, adding 2 years for this bloody mess situation these consoles would be around $1,450 and $1,100. You'll need at least a $3,000 rig at that time equivalent to Helix and a $2,500 rig equivalent to PS6. I recommend buying a ps5 pro if you don't have it and save your money for 10th gen cause you never know. You can't compare 10th gen consoles to older GPUs, these are just facts, Jensen will show the new consumer series of nvidia at ces following Helix and PS6 release.I dont know if this is ok, i hope so, and bare with me as english aint my native language.
Well then, i bought my first console 40 years ago, i always loved playing on console and still do, never had any interest in PC until now.
I am giving up consoles in the future except Nintendos.
So i am trying to read and learn as much as i can, i dont know that much about all the components etc and it feels like a jungle, and my first question is; i dont need it right now, maybe in 2-3 year, is it smart to wait or is it better to buy one asap? Some say prices will go down but I dont know about that...
I know that memory etc cost a lot now because of ai.
I am sure there is a lot of talented people here that can give me some tips on what to buy.
I am really deep in VR since +10 years that is one thing, it has to be really good for vrgaming, i have both psvr2 and Quest 3 so the plan is to use probably q3 with the PC.
Budget around 2000$
I am very happy if you want to guide me into this new path in my life : )
Let me get this straight and simple, gen 9 started with Series X and PS5 at $499.99 and at that time, it'll cost you more than $1,000 to build something as strong, back forward to the future, Helix at $1,200 and PS6 around $950, adding 2 years for this bloody mess situation these consoles would be around $1,450 and $1,100. You'll need at least a $3,000 rig at that time equivalent to Helix and a $2,500 rig equivalent to PS6. I recommend buying a ps5 pro if you don't have it and save your money for 10th gen cause you never know. You can't compare 10th gen consoles to older GPUs, these are just facts, Jensen will show the new consumer series of nvidia at ces following Helix and PS6 release.
Actually the 9850 is cheaper here, so thats why i took that : )That PC is good. But I see no reason to pick the 9850X3D.
I don't know about prices there, but chances are the 9800X3D is a bit cheaper and it's the same CPU, just with the power limits tunned down a bit and lower clocks.
But the 9800X3D is unlocked and you tweak it to use the same power profile as the 9850X3D. Besides, it's only a 5% performance difference, sacrificing power usage and temperatures.
Actually the 9850 is cheaper here, so thats why i took that : )
However, i saw a guy that recommended 7500f for vr and that is way cheaper than 9800/50 and also even though 9070 xt is good he also recommended 5070 ti as a better choice for vr, so back to the drawing board i guess...
Yep, do not get AMD if you're going to do VR. Go for the 5070 ti. That's non-negotiable.Actually the 9850 is cheaper here, so thats why i took that : )
However, i saw a guy that recommended 7500f for vr and that is way cheaper than 9800/50 and also even though 9070 xt is good he also recommended 5070 ti as a better choice for vr, so back to the drawing board i guess...
That's not how it works... A PC needs this much DRAM. You could choose just 16GB—it will usually be enough—but more is better.
Many games will take whatever you give it. That doesn't mean it requires it. Again, recommended specs of the vast majority of new games is 16GB. Of course more is better. More so for VRAM than DRAM unless you are only playing at 1080p.
What part of "cheap build" do you not understand?
HU video test showed that vast majority of games will work fine with 16GB of RAM (only Mafia showed some difference with 32GB).
To me the best option now is to buy AM5 build with one 16GB memory module - you can always add another module when you need it (months, years from now). VRAM is actually more important, 12GB is the minimum now.
To clarify, AMD CPU is fine, but for the GPU Nvidia will be better for specifically VR. Otherwise 9070XT is on par with 5070Ti.Yep, do not get AMD if you're going to do VR. Go for the 5070 ti. That's non-negotiable.
To clarify, AMD CPU is fine, but for the GPU Nvidia will be better for specifically VR. Otherwise 9070XT is on par with 5070Ti.
I also wouldn't go lower than 7800x3D (if that can save you a few € vs 9800x3d). Maybe 7600x3d?
That's a great build and especially for non-VR purposes, AMD GPU is just as good (or better in some games).It feels like i am going with 9800, its like 100€ difference to 7800.
However, its 300€ more for 5070ti than 9070xt...
So this is the build right now;
![]()
That's a great build and especially for non-VR purposes, AMD GPU is just as good (or better in some games).
Yeah, a 9060 XT 16GB is a great card for the current price. It's a shame Valve made the design decisions they have but it was for a different price structure.I'm using a 9060 xt with my mini PC (have my 5080 hooked up to the TV for big picture mode) and I'm impressed how it handles sub-4k gaming, mostly CRPGs. I was using a 7600 trying to match what the Steam Machine could do, but the difference is pretty huge, frankly. Difference is only $100 too
Sounds good, but from what i can read it will handle vr really good to?That's a great build and especially for non-VR purposes, AMD GPU is just as good (or better in some games).
I unfortunately have to lower settings in Forza Horizon 6 when I play on PC because it exceeds 16GB of memory and stutters like crazy which is annoying because I can easily run it maxed out otherwise.HU video test showed that vast majority of games will work fine with 16GB of RAM (only Mafia showed some difference with 32GB).
To me the best option now is to buy AM5 build with one 16GB memory module - you can always add another module when you need it (months, years from now). VRAM is actually more important, 12GB is the minimum now.
It will be alright but not as good as Nvidia option. Just don't expect crazy stuff like 90 frames at 4K.Sounds good, but from what i can read it will handle vr really good to?
I unfortunately have to lower settings in Forza Horizon 6 when I play on PC because it exceeds 16GB of memory and stutters like crazy which is annoying because I can easily run it maxed out otherwise.
Thanks for good input!It will be alright but not as good as Nvidia option. Just don't expect crazy stuff like 90 frames at 4K.
Edit: Personally if VR was very important, I would downgrade CPU to 7800x3D, take the €100 and put it toward 5070Ti.
4070 Super so 12GBI have 32GB of DDR4 and I saw a few games going above 16GB (Hogwart ~24GB) but in general they don't need as much RAM. Forza also likes vram a lot, how much do you have?
Yeah, that makes sense then. And going with 7800x3D saves you cash and you are unlikely to hit a CPU bottleneck with a 9070XT.Thanks for good input!
Thing is, i wont main vr, but I really like to get the most out of my headsets, however, i will probably play like 80% flat and 20%vr..... So i should probably go for 9070ti....
And, also, then i think its ok to go for 7800x3D instead of 9800? Save some cash?
This. 24GB DRAM recommended.I unfortunately have to lower settings in Forza Horizon 6 when I play on PC because it exceeds 16GB of memory and stutters like crazy which is annoying because I can easily run it maxed out otherwise.
What is the issue with Radeon + VR?Yep, do not get AMD if you're going to do VR. Go for the 5070 ti. That's non-negotiable.
Thanks for good input!
Thing is, i wont main vr, but I really like to get the most out of my headsets, however, i will probably play like 80% flat and 20%vr..... So i should probably go for 9070ti....
And, also, then i think its ok to go for 7800x3D instead of 9800? Save some cash?
Yeah, idiots![]()
I really hate when people ask for advice and straight up ignores it lmao…..
Overall lower performance.What is the issue with Radeon + VR?
Odd as everything is just raster rendering.Overall lower performance.
Big part of it is overall poor video encoding vs Nvidia (because standalone headsets have to stream the image from the PC even when using a cable), and less than ideal driver support for VR.Odd as everything is just raster rendering.