I absolutely plan on doing quite a bit of benchmarking, both with my current computer, the new computer, the new computer with my better RAM swapped in, and the old computer with the new computer RAM swapped in.felter wrote: ↑Wed, 2. Feb 22, 05:25Falcrack, when you get your computer, you need to do some benchmarking, so we can see how good or bad it actually is. I would recommend doing the testing on your current computer, out of the box for the new one and then again after you change anything, which I find crazy as If I was getting a new computer I wouldn't be thinking I will have to change this, that or the next thing when I get it. Personally, I think you are being ripped off, but hey it's your money and I hope it works out for you.
choosing a gaming computer
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Re: choosing a gaming computer
Re: choosing a gaming computer
The shop is not the cheapest here and prices overall are higher here; many rather order components from Germany than shop local. The point was the amount of details.
Is this shopping scene on the ballpark about computers in US?
Re: choosing a gaming computer
As to the amount of details, the stores selling these computers are just the middlemen, and they have provided as many details as the manufacturer (often not based in the US) provides them. Some have more details than others, but I don't think you can generalize too much from these two websites I provided.jlehtone wrote: ↑Wed, 2. Feb 22, 08:40The shop is not the cheapest here and prices overall are higher here; many rather order components from Germany than shop local. The point was the amount of details.
Is this shopping scene on the ballpark about computers in US?
Re: choosing a gaming computer
So, I got the computer yesterday (i5-12600K, 3060Ti). I had bought it through Best Buy. Still need to do a few things to put it through its paces, but my impressions so far.
1. I had asked Best Buy whether it was air cooled or liquid cooled. They said air cooled, probably based on the same picture I was looking at. Well, they lied, because it is liquid cooled. Not that I am complaining! I had been considering buying a tower air cooler before the computer, but it arrived early, on Feb 4th instead of Feb 10th, so my procrastination paid off.
2. The motherboard is an Asus Z690-P Wifi D4. I don't know whether that is good or bad, but it retails at Newegg.com for $239.99, so it is not a bottom of the barrel motherboard.
3. The thing is colorful! Very colorful. The 3 front fans, the circular CPU mount for the liquid cooler, and the back fan are synchronized, with many different moving patterns. Definitely something I wouldn't have spent money on if I were building it myself, but it does add a very nice touch. It even has a little remote control I can use to change the lights and color patterns. Overall, it looks very nice. The inside is very clean and organized, wires are very nicely tucked away, unlike the somewhat messy way it looks when I put together computers myself.
4. The mouse it came with was a piece of crap. It is a gaming mouse with far more buttons than I desire, and one of these buttons, on the top, controls the lighting on the mouse. Unfortunately, when I pressed that button, it immediately became stuck "down" and would not pop back up again. I quickly changed that out for another mouse I am more comfortable with. But I didn't buy this computer for the mouse.
5. The keyboard it came with (CyberPowerPC brand) is nice, better I think than what I had. It had backlit keys, a volume control dial, and is "pseudo-mechanical", meaning it kind of looks and acts like a mechanical keyboard without actually being one. Again, I didn't buy the computer for the mouse and keyboard, and would have gotten it at its price without any mouse and keyboard.
6. When I plugged in a USB device into the front USB on the top, it seemed to shift/push down the entire front USB panel, which includes the power button. This caused the power button to be stuck in the "down" position, meaning when I shut off the computer, I couldn't press that button to turn it on again! I had to fiddle with it so that this panel shifted back into the correct position and the power button popped back up again.
7. The RAM is 16 GB DDR4 3000 MHz, CAS latency 16, in contrast to the RAM in my other computer which is 32 GB DDR4 3600 MHz Cas latency 18. Not sure which will be faster, so at some point I will swap in my other ram during some benchmark tests. XMP was not enabled by default in the BIOS, so I enabled it, and the speed jumped to 3200 MHz.
8. I cannot see the power supply brand, as it is inside a box I would have to unscrew in order to see it, and I don't really care too much about that detail. It powers the computer, so I am okay unless it dies at some point, in which case I will get a new PSU.
As to the speed, it seems to get at least twice the fps as my other computer running X4, which is an i7-7700K with a 1060 6GB GPU, even when I set it to Ultra graphics settings, which is not what I normally have it set at. So it seems very fast, but I will do more detailed benchmarking later! The first program I installed, besides Chrome (which Microsoft Edge cried mightily about at every step of the installation of Chrome, it was kind of pathetic) was a program called Start 11, which makes it so I can change the Windows 11 start menu around to have more of a feel of the classic Windows 7 start menu, which I greatly prefer.
1. I had asked Best Buy whether it was air cooled or liquid cooled. They said air cooled, probably based on the same picture I was looking at. Well, they lied, because it is liquid cooled. Not that I am complaining! I had been considering buying a tower air cooler before the computer, but it arrived early, on Feb 4th instead of Feb 10th, so my procrastination paid off.
2. The motherboard is an Asus Z690-P Wifi D4. I don't know whether that is good or bad, but it retails at Newegg.com for $239.99, so it is not a bottom of the barrel motherboard.
3. The thing is colorful! Very colorful. The 3 front fans, the circular CPU mount for the liquid cooler, and the back fan are synchronized, with many different moving patterns. Definitely something I wouldn't have spent money on if I were building it myself, but it does add a very nice touch. It even has a little remote control I can use to change the lights and color patterns. Overall, it looks very nice. The inside is very clean and organized, wires are very nicely tucked away, unlike the somewhat messy way it looks when I put together computers myself.
4. The mouse it came with was a piece of crap. It is a gaming mouse with far more buttons than I desire, and one of these buttons, on the top, controls the lighting on the mouse. Unfortunately, when I pressed that button, it immediately became stuck "down" and would not pop back up again. I quickly changed that out for another mouse I am more comfortable with. But I didn't buy this computer for the mouse.
5. The keyboard it came with (CyberPowerPC brand) is nice, better I think than what I had. It had backlit keys, a volume control dial, and is "pseudo-mechanical", meaning it kind of looks and acts like a mechanical keyboard without actually being one. Again, I didn't buy the computer for the mouse and keyboard, and would have gotten it at its price without any mouse and keyboard.
6. When I plugged in a USB device into the front USB on the top, it seemed to shift/push down the entire front USB panel, which includes the power button. This caused the power button to be stuck in the "down" position, meaning when I shut off the computer, I couldn't press that button to turn it on again! I had to fiddle with it so that this panel shifted back into the correct position and the power button popped back up again.
7. The RAM is 16 GB DDR4 3000 MHz, CAS latency 16, in contrast to the RAM in my other computer which is 32 GB DDR4 3600 MHz Cas latency 18. Not sure which will be faster, so at some point I will swap in my other ram during some benchmark tests. XMP was not enabled by default in the BIOS, so I enabled it, and the speed jumped to 3200 MHz.
8. I cannot see the power supply brand, as it is inside a box I would have to unscrew in order to see it, and I don't really care too much about that detail. It powers the computer, so I am okay unless it dies at some point, in which case I will get a new PSU.
As to the speed, it seems to get at least twice the fps as my other computer running X4, which is an i7-7700K with a 1060 6GB GPU, even when I set it to Ultra graphics settings, which is not what I normally have it set at. So it seems very fast, but I will do more detailed benchmarking later! The first program I installed, besides Chrome (which Microsoft Edge cried mightily about at every step of the installation of Chrome, it was kind of pathetic) was a program called Start 11, which makes it so I can change the Windows 11 start menu around to have more of a feel of the classic Windows 7 start menu, which I greatly prefer.
Re: choosing a gaming computer
CAS latency is measured in terms of clock cycles, so the latency on the new RAM is 16/3000, whereas the old is 18/3600. That makes the old RAM very, very slightly better in terms of latency, and of course it's faster, so it will definitely be quicker. You don't say if the RAM in the new PC is dual channel or not, though? If that 16Gb is a single 16Gb stick then that will cripple its performance *far* more than any consideration of its actual speed.Falcrack wrote: ↑Sat, 5. Feb 22, 15:197. The RAM is 16 GB DDR4 3000 MHz, CAS latency 16, in contrast to the RAM in my other computer which is 32 GB DDR4 3600 MHz Cas latency 18. Not sure which will be faster, so at some point I will swap in my other ram during some benchmark tests. XMP was not enabled by default in the BIOS, so I enabled it, and the speed jumped to 3200 MHz.
Re: choosing a gaming computer
It is 2X 8GB sticks in the new comppjknibbs wrote: ↑Sat, 5. Feb 22, 16:57CAS latency is measured in terms of clock cycles, so the latency on the new RAM is 16/3000, whereas the old is 18/3600. That makes the old RAM very, very slightly better in terms of latency, and of course it's faster, so it will definitely be quicker. You don't say if the RAM in the new PC is dual channel or not, though? If that 16Gb is a single 16Gb stick then that will cripple its performance *far* more than any consideration of its actual speed.Falcrack wrote: ↑Sat, 5. Feb 22, 15:197. The RAM is 16 GB DDR4 3000 MHz, CAS latency 16, in contrast to the RAM in my other computer which is 32 GB DDR4 3600 MHz Cas latency 18. Not sure which will be faster, so at some point I will swap in my other ram during some benchmark tests. XMP was not enabled by default in the BIOS, so I enabled it, and the speed jumped to 3200 MHz.
It was a bit disappointing that more details were not spelled out on the website when I purchased it, but I am not disappointed with what actually was delivered. Particularly the water cooled CPU, I was not expecting that.
Re: choosing a gaming computer
I do the same since 1993 yet this year because they want to sell overprised GPUs they make newbuilds better buy.
We have a broken market.
Re: choosing a gaming computer
Yeah, now that I know the exact components used in my new computer, the price for me to buy everything separately at Newegg.com was $2143, compared to $1689 for the prebuilt computer.Panos wrote: ↑Sat, 5. Feb 22, 22:16I do the same since 1993 yet this year because they want to sell overprised GPUs they make newbuilds better buy.
We have a broken market.
Re: choosing a gaming computer
The 3600 cl18 will be the better ram most likely. Reset the bios before sticking it in. If the pc black screens, unplug pc, press power button a few times and remove cmos battery and wait 3 min+, put battery back etc....
Can buy a usb extension cable several feet long or a hub if the front panel usb is going to be a pain.
Can buy a usb extension cable several feet long or a hub if the front panel usb is going to be a pain.
Re: choosing a gaming computer
I did some benchmarking with the new ram (16 GB 3200 MHz CL16) vs the RAM in my old computer (32 GB 3600 MHz CL18) using the "Ashes of the Singularity" benchmarking feature, both using XMP. The 3200 CL16 RAM gave an average fps of 64.3, whereas the 3600 CL18 RAM gave an average fps of 63.5, so it was very close. But I will be using the 3600 CL18 RAM even though it was ~1 fps less, because it is 32 GB vs 16 GB.burger1 wrote: ↑Sun, 6. Feb 22, 05:29The 3600 cl18 will be the better ram most likely. Reset the bios before sticking it in. If the pc black screens, unplug pc, press power button a few times and remove cmos battery and wait 3 min+, put battery back etc....
Can buy a usb extension cable several feet long or a hub if the front panel usb is going to be a pain.
These are the benchmark results I've made so far, using Ashes of the Singularity:
12600K, 3060Ti, 16 GB XMP (3200 Mhz, CL16): 64.3 fps
12600K, 3060Ti, 16 GB No XMP (2400 Mhz, CL16): 62.4 fps
12600K, 3060Ti, 32 GB XMP (3600 Mhz, CL18): 63.5 fps
12600K, 3060Ti, 32 GB No XMP (2133 Mhz, CL18): 59.8 fps
7700K, 1060 6 GB, 32 GB XMP (3600 Mhz, CL18): 34.7 fps
So the new computer gave me roughly double fps from what I had before. When I get the chance, I will pop the GTX 1060 card into the new computer to see how much of the fps gain was from the GPU, and how much was from the graphics card. I have a feeling that this particular benchmark is more dependent on the GPU, as it specifically indicated on the benchmark page for Ashes that it was a GPU benchmark.
Re: choosing a gaming computer
TBH, a difference in FPS that small could easily just be margin of error on your benchmark run, unless you did each run several times and averaged out the results. Certainly makes sense to me to use the larger RAM kit when the performance margins are that narrow.
Re: choosing a gaming computer
I did 2 or 3 replicates of each, what I reported here was the average. The standard deviation for each run was quite small.pjknibbs wrote: ↑Sun, 6. Feb 22, 21:58TBH, a difference in FPS that small could easily just be margin of error on your benchmark run, unless you did each run several times and averaged out the results. Certainly makes sense to me to use the larger RAM kit when the performance margins are that narrow.
12600K, 3060 Ti, 16 GB XMP (3200, CL16)
Ashes
Average Framerate (All Batches): 64.8, 65.4, 62.8
Average Framerate (Normal Batches): 89.7, 92.2, 89.2
Average Framerate (Medium Batches): 68.7, 70.4, 68.6
Average Framerate (Heavy Batches): 48.6, 47.9,45.5
12600K, 3060 Ti, 16 GB No XMP (2400, CL16)
Ashes
Average Framerate (All Batches): 63.8, 61.8, 61.7
Average Framerate (Normal Batches): 88.8, 87.0, 86.2
Average Framerate (Medium Batches): 67.8, 66.2, 66.2
Average Framerate (Heavy Batches): 47.6, 45.5, 45.7
7700K, 1060, 32 GB XMP (3600, CL18)
Ashes
Average Framerate (All Batches): 34.9, 34.5
Average Framerate (Normal Batches): 42.8, 43.0
Average Framerate (Medium Batches): 36.1, 35.3
Average Framerate (Heavy Batches): 28.7, 28.2
12600K, 3060 Ti, 32 GB No XMP (2133, CL18)
Ashes
Average Framerate (All Batches): 59.9, 59.7
Average Framerate (Normal Batches): 85.8, 85.3
Average Framerate (Medium Batches): 63.3 64.0
Average Framerate (Heavy Batches): 44.2, 43.6
12600K, 3060 Ti, 32 GB XMP (3600, CL18)
Ashes
Average Framerate (All Batches): 64.7, 63.7, 62.2
Average Framerate (Normal Batches): 90.4, 90.4, 88.0
Average Framerate (Medium Batches): 69.9, 68.1, 67.0
Average Framerate (Heavy Batches): 47.7, 46.9, 45.6
Re: choosing a gaming computer
Gamers nexus have done a few reviews on both CyberPower and iBUYPOWER pre-built computers, while the ones I linked are not the same models as the op listed, it still shows their quality and standards that one should be expecting when buying one of these manufacturer's computers.
Florida Man Makes Announcement.
We live in a crazy world where winter heating has become a luxury item.
We live in a crazy world where winter heating has become a luxury item.