Check if it meets your needs for gaming.
Check if it meets your needs for gaming.
This CPU tends to cause problems in most games, so you shouldn’t face too many issues with League of Legends. It might work fine for older titles, but anything newer will likely slow things down. It could be suitable for emulation, mainly for classic games. I wouldn’t spend much on it, even with limited funds, since you’ll probably need a better CPU soon. The absence of dedicated graphics means you’ll also need a compatible GPU, which takes time and money to set up. In short, I wouldn’t buy it right now.
PCPartPicker component inventory / Cost summary by seller CPU: AMD - Ryzen 3 2200G 3.5GHz Quad-Core Chip ($98.79 @ SuperBiiz) Board: ASRock - B450M PRO4 Micro ATX AM4 Board ($69.71 @ Newegg) RAM: G.Skill - Ripjaws V Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR4-2800 ($67.98 @ Newegg) Data Storage: Inland - Professional 120GB 2.5" SSD ($23.99 @ Amazon) Internal Drive: Western Digital - Caviar Blue 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM ($43.94 @ Amazon) Housing: Rosewill - SRM-01 MicroATX Mini Tower Case ($26.99 @ Amazon) Power Supply: Corsair - CX (2017) 450W Bronze Certified ATX ($45.00 @ Amazon) Overall: $376.40 Inclusions shipping, taxes, and applicable discounts Provided by PCPartPicker 2018-10-11 04:15 EDT-0400 You might want this with an R9 290x/390x/nano/fury addition Edit: Yes I know this doesn't cover monitor etc. Just noticed 2 minutes after posting
Well ok, plus looking up Z68, p67 motherboards for my i5-2500k from my current build, most of them go for 80-100$ anything lower then 80 us scetchy things that either dont work or from china. Though ill try to find some Mobo Ram combos for now Oh and Gold, I tried to do a similar build to that but everyone in my area is selling their ryzens for like MSRP +40$ for some reason on every ryzen, plus Having issues with banks so i try to pick up locally. Though I forgot about PC partpicker
Have you considered contacting them to reduce the cost? You could suggest a price difference of at least 40% compared to the current retail value. A 1TB HDD typically costs between $5 and $10. An SSD would be worth purchasing for around $24.