Yerd
Member
Input is needed! Astray and other experienced in ITX builds.
I’ll be posting specs and US dollar converted local prices, cry with me, and after that I hope I can get some advices where to lower specs to get a more sane price for a living room PC to replace Sony/MS consoles.
Case:
Cooler Master Ncore 100 Max - $479
Motherboard:
MSI MPG B650I Edge WIFI - $339
CPU:
AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D 4.2GHz 104MB - $449
Graphics card:
MSI GeForce RTX 4080 Super 16GB Expert - $1549
RAM:
Kingston 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 5200MHz CL36 FURY Beast - $145
SSD:
Samsung 990 PRO M.2 NVMe SSD 2TB - $240
OS:
Windows 11 Home - $199
Total: $3400
If I could go down below $3000 it would feel okay-ish. Lower than $2000 would be awesome. But I don’t want to find myself in a scenario where I can’t get 60fps in a year or 2 since I don’t have any VRR to hide stutter, every drop below 60 would cause a stutter down to 30 and I hate fps stutter.
I remember seeing this case on TPU being announced now. I was coming here to flame out that case based on the price. Until I realized it comes with a cooler and a PSU. It's still feels over priced. This is coming from someone that bought an $800 caselabs case. That now sits in a closet unused.
The biggest problem with the case that I see is you are limited to that cooler forever. Only a single 120m rad and fan. That, to me, is a big problem. As a person that has been building PCs and PC gaming since the 90s, that's something I would avoid. Cases can last forever. I've put to use some older cases for decades. The only thing that puts them out is newer features that can't be changed. I've always been driven to lighter and lighter cases, almost always made of aluminum, with ease of use in mind.
I know some people have an aversion to reddit, but this is a very good source of info for what you are getting into. There is a list of parts and compatibility there as well. I don't know if your case is there, but check it out.
You can also search up SFF PC in google or whatever because that's the widely used term for this. Small Form Factor