F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Yes, absolutely. Your PC is still very good in 2020. It’s perfectly capable of handling modern tasks and applications.

Yes, absolutely. Your PC is still very good in 2020. It’s perfectly capable of handling modern tasks and applications.

Yes, absolutely. Your PC is still very good in 2020. It’s perfectly capable of handling modern tasks and applications.

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husker53
Posting Freak
802
01-23-2016, 12:56 PM
#1
GeForce GTX 1060-2G GDDR6 128 Bit

This upgrade will provide a significant performance boost without creating a major bottleneck with your current system components. It’s a popular choice for this generation of hardware and offers excellent value.
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husker53
01-23-2016, 12:56 PM #1

GeForce GTX 1060-2G GDDR6 128 Bit

This upgrade will provide a significant performance boost without creating a major bottleneck with your current system components. It’s a popular choice for this generation of hardware and offers excellent value.

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leonardo0803
Member
180
01-23-2016, 01:38 PM
#2
if you have a single 8GB stick of RAM, getting an identical stick would allow you to run in dual-channel. Also, ideally, you'd want faster RAM – if you can get a 2x8 GB kit, at, say 2933MHz RAM speed, and sell off your existing single stick, that would be worth considering. I also agree that if you have a regular hard drive, going to an SSD will make boot up, logging in, application start up, etc., so much faster. And finally – yeah, before you do anything as…
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leonardo0803
01-23-2016, 01:38 PM #2

if you have a single 8GB stick of RAM, getting an identical stick would allow you to run in dual-channel. Also, ideally, you'd want faster RAM – if you can get a 2x8 GB kit, at, say 2933MHz RAM speed, and sell off your existing single stick, that would be worth considering. I also agree that if you have a regular hard drive, going to an SSD will make boot up, logging in, application start up, etc., so much faster. And finally – yeah, before you do anything as…

A
AuraPvp_YT
Member
58
01-23-2016, 06:12 PM
#3
The RTX 4070 Super is an incredible card and will handle virtually any game at high settings and resolutions. To maximize its performance, upgrading your PSU to a robust 850W unit with 80+ Gold certification would be ideal. This ensures you have ample headroom for the GPU's power draw and potential future upgrades. Additionally, consider optimizing your RAM – 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz or faster will significantly improve performance in many titles. Finally, ensure your motherboard supports PCIe 4.0 for optimal bandwidth with the RTX 4070 Super.
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AuraPvp_YT
01-23-2016, 06:12 PM #3

The RTX 4070 Super is an incredible card and will handle virtually any game at high settings and resolutions. To maximize its performance, upgrading your PSU to a robust 850W unit with 80+ Gold certification would be ideal. This ensures you have ample headroom for the GPU's power draw and potential future upgrades. Additionally, consider optimizing your RAM – 32GB of DDR5-6000MHz or faster will significantly improve performance in many titles. Finally, ensure your motherboard supports PCIe 4.0 for optimal bandwidth with the RTX 4070 Super.

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muldrik
Member
114
01-24-2016, 12:52 AM
#4
ASUS TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 3050 8GB Graphics Card - 144Hz Display

Apex Legends, Warzone, shooters, high FPS, budget gaming, 144Hz display, RTX 3050, 8GB VRAM, smooth gameplay.
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muldrik
01-24-2016, 12:52 AM #4

ASUS TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 3050 8GB Graphics Card - 144Hz Display

Apex Legends, Warzone, shooters, high FPS, budget gaming, 144Hz display, RTX 3050, 8GB VRAM, smooth gameplay.

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longhornfan20
Junior Member
14
01-30-2016, 12:46 AM
#5
I myself would go double your ram from 8>16 can be done from 50 euros (55$) as 16gb makes a big difference in my experience. Makes your windows make less of virtual memory. Even so for example Chrome can easily reach the 8gb barrier nowadays, sadly... If you have 1x8gb already is smart to buy the same mem (brand/type) for compatibility
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longhornfan20
01-30-2016, 12:46 AM #5

I myself would go double your ram from 8>16 can be done from 50 euros (55$) as 16gb makes a big difference in my experience. Makes your windows make less of virtual memory. Even so for example Chrome can easily reach the 8gb barrier nowadays, sadly... If you have 1x8gb already is smart to buy the same mem (brand/type) for compatibility

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Darkforen
Junior Member
4
02-01-2016, 10:47 AM
#6
Thanks for the tip, is there anything else I could change.
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Darkforen
02-01-2016, 10:47 AM #6

Thanks for the tip, is there anything else I could change.

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LorrenK
Senior Member
703
02-03-2016, 01:47 AM
#7
I really think RAM and maybe SSD.
Cause upgrading $100 in GPU I don’t really think gonna worth it.
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LorrenK
02-03-2016, 01:47 AM #7

I really think RAM and maybe SSD.
Cause upgrading $100 in GPU I don’t really think gonna worth it.

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Elia1153
Member
217
02-03-2016, 03:25 AM
#8
I suspected he had an SSD
😛
If not, it is a must to make your Windows 10 fly
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Elia1153
02-03-2016, 03:25 AM #8

I suspected he had an SSD
😛
If not, it is a must to make your Windows 10 fly

C
Chris120601
Junior Member
5
02-09-2016, 09:45 AM
#9
If you have a single 8GB stick of RAM, getting an identical stick would allow you to run in dual-channel. Also, ideally, you’d want faster RAM – if you can get a 2x8 GB kit, at, say 2933MHz RAM speed, and sell off your existing single stick, that would be worth considering. I also agree that if you have a regular hard drive, going to an SSD will make boot up, logging in, application start up, etc., so much faster. And finally – yeah, before you do anything as power-demanding as, say, a GPU upgrade, GET A BETTER POWER SUPPLY. The first two links in my sig offer guidance as to what is good vs what is untrustworthy vs what is a dumpster-fire waiting to happen. It’s not about the wattage rating, it’s about the quality of the components inside the PSU.
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Chris120601
02-09-2016, 09:45 AM #9

If you have a single 8GB stick of RAM, getting an identical stick would allow you to run in dual-channel. Also, ideally, you’d want faster RAM – if you can get a 2x8 GB kit, at, say 2933MHz RAM speed, and sell off your existing single stick, that would be worth considering. I also agree that if you have a regular hard drive, going to an SSD will make boot up, logging in, application start up, etc., so much faster. And finally – yeah, before you do anything as power-demanding as, say, a GPU upgrade, GET A BETTER POWER SUPPLY. The first two links in my sig offer guidance as to what is good vs what is untrustworthy vs what is a dumpster-fire waiting to happen. It’s not about the wattage rating, it’s about the quality of the components inside the PSU.