Is this gaming pc good and worth the cost?

Sw
- in Hardware
10

https://hardwarerat.de/...ws-10?c=78 Hey wanted to know if it would be a good decision to buy this gaming pc and I wanted to ask again how much fps you would have with the Fortnite and so on highest settings.

To

Yes, this is from hardware council and the guys from Hardwarat know what they're doing 🙂 price / performance ratio top 👍

Au

It looks pretty good so far and doesn't seem to be too expensive for what it is.

However, I'm his great computer expert.

Ex

Is the best you can buy ready.

Mi

In itself: yes. BUT: assembling yourself is always cheaper.

But if you want to buy it ready I would recommend https://aurapc.de. 😉

Be

Why do you recommend something worse to him?

Mi

I don't. For 100 euro less he gets an equivalent system. (Except for the processor) while the graphics card is more powerful without being licked.

To

Too expensive…

Be

I can't find an equivalent PC…

Mainly because they all get the same cheaper power supply, significantly cheaper mainboards and QLC SSDs for the system memory…

What is equivalent to it please?

Pure performance has always been, is and will never be the only thing that counts for a good PC configuration!

But the main thing is "Premium", right?

Dr

Generally quite potent.

But not without comment:

550W power supply is a bit tight. Without "special options", the utilization should be 480W pi-mal-thumb.

Special options would be, for example: Charging function via USB 3.1 / Type C, many USB devices, overclocking, sometimes a new / current graphics card […] Then you are quickly at 550W and more.

Such hardware should not be operated with a power supply that is below 600W. After all, you want to enjoy it even longer.

Be

Such hardware should not be operated with a power supply that is below 600W. After all, you want to enjoy it even longer.

Nonsense…

The CPU draws a maximum of 90-100 watts under normal load, with PBO 111-140 watts, depending on the board.

The Ryzen 3000 CPUs have become damn efficient!

The KFA2 RTX 2070 Super draws maximum controlled 240 watts under heavy load with OC without custom BIOS.

So we're only at 380 watts, with OC included.

You don't want to make me know that you need 100 watts for 4 fans, 2 SSDs and 2 RAM bars that clock a little higher…

And apart from that, the mainboard has not implemented a USB-C like this, neither via the external I / O, nor via the internal header and the housing.

And a new graphics card will not necessarily draw more power unless you go directly to a 2080 Super / Ti or one of its successors…