SolVanderlyn
Thanos acquires the fully powered Infinity Gauntlet in The Avengers: Infinity War, but loses when all the superheroes team up together to stop him.
You may recall a thread about FF14 killing someone's PC a while back. Well, that was me, and now it dies when I play any old game for about 20 minutes.
I was initially very wary about building a PC for this reason. I spent a good $2k on it, which is more than I've actually spent on any hobby related thing ever, and it worked very well for about two years with no problems, but now it's acting up to the point where I can hardly use it. I love the way it looks, but the fan is always, always super loud and at this point I'm thinking it would be more pragmatic to drop the $$ on a better, pre-built PC rather than spend hundreds of dollars updating the cooling system and graphics cards. Current specs are as follows:
For someone who's not a serious PC gamer, would it be better to
A) Give up and go back to consoles
B) Try to figure out why it keeps struggling and dying and upgrade (I'm 95% sure it's overheating/needs better power source and cooling)
C) Get a pre-built gaming PC or laptop
I figure on an enthusiast forum like this the overwhelming response will be "upgrade your PC you dolt," but I am a bit strapped for cash at the moment and am looking for the safest option. I really can't be bothered to constantly switch out parts when they stop working, but if this is a normal, once every two-to-three-year thing it might be doable.
TL;DR: I'm a PC noob who built his own PC and is scared it's not working now and want an opinion from people who are much better at this than me
UPDATES:
Tried this... or rather, I had my friend who built my PC and fixes computers for a living do it for me.
Also this, because I didn't consider that most people don't factor in other things when talking about PCs:
I was initially very wary about building a PC for this reason. I spent a good $2k on it, which is more than I've actually spent on any hobby related thing ever, and it worked very well for about two years with no problems, but now it's acting up to the point where I can hardly use it. I love the way it looks, but the fan is always, always super loud and at this point I'm thinking it would be more pragmatic to drop the $$ on a better, pre-built PC rather than spend hundreds of dollars updating the cooling system and graphics cards. Current specs are as follows:

For someone who's not a serious PC gamer, would it be better to
A) Give up and go back to consoles
B) Try to figure out why it keeps struggling and dying and upgrade (I'm 95% sure it's overheating/needs better power source and cooling)
C) Get a pre-built gaming PC or laptop
I figure on an enthusiast forum like this the overwhelming response will be "upgrade your PC you dolt," but I am a bit strapped for cash at the moment and am looking for the safest option. I really can't be bothered to constantly switch out parts when they stop working, but if this is a normal, once every two-to-three-year thing it might be doable.
TL;DR: I'm a PC noob who built his own PC and is scared it's not working now and want an opinion from people who are much better at this than me
UPDATES:
I'm willing to bet the heatsink isn't touching the CPU or there CPU is covered in thermal paste.
- Remove the fan and heatsink from the CPU.
- Wipe the thermal compound off the CPU.
- Apply a pea sized amount of thermal compound to the center of the CPU. Do not spread it or put more than that. The heat will expand the paste to the entire CPU by itself when it heats up.
- Carefully screw the heatsink and fan back on to the CPU and make sure it firmly in place
- Make sure to reconnect the fan on the CPU to your motherboard
If your case is not to the touch, you may also have your fans positioned incorrectly and the air can't escape. If you have front fans, they should be sucking air into the machine while all other fans on the back/side/top should be blowing out. There are typically arrows on the fans showing which direction the air will flow but you can easily test it by putting a piece of paper over them. It will either suck the paper in or blow it away.
Worst case, take pictures of the inside of your case and post them here.
Tried this... or rather, I had my friend who built my PC and fixes computers for a living do it for me.
I replaced the thermal paste and reset my CPU and it runs much quieter now...
BUT it still can't play games without shutting down. The temp dropped about 10 degrees and runs at about 50 while idle now.
Ordered Hyper 212 Evo cooler. Will check back to see if that works, also will dust inside and check PSU fan. Next step is new PSU if none of that works.
Also this, because I didn't consider that most people don't factor in other things when talking about PCs:
PS: OP, update the OP so people know that you didn't spend 2k on the PC. You spent about 1k, and another 1k on the monitor and such. Make that more clear that way you can end that part of the discussion.