Should You Build Or Buy Your Gaming PC? 🤔

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 340

  • @akuasensu2437
    @akuasensu2437 Месяц назад +44

    building my first pc was actually pretty straightforward thanks to all the pc centric videos I've watched

    • @-ZIGS
      @-ZIGS 21 час назад

      Hey dont know if youll see this but was this your first time building/putting together something like a pc and did the videos really help in your opinion

  • @Stock--Rosso
    @Stock--Rosso Месяц назад +177

    I've done and do both. Just make sure your PC builder gives you the choice of every part used and NEVER BUY A PRE-BUILT! You may get lucky with a pre-built, but most of the time they'll cheap out on one or more parts Great video👍🏼

    • @user-sb1vz9pv5y
      @user-sb1vz9pv5y Месяц назад +13

      It's not necessarily that they are cheating out but rather how much can they put in it and still make it affordable.
      A store like say Best Buy isn't gonna want to sell a gaming pc with the highest priced or best components only to see the pc sit on the shelf for 3 years. Because it's too expensive.

    • @phillipcurrey6961
      @phillipcurrey6961 Месяц назад +2

      ​@user-sb1vz9pv5y Nope, all prebuilts are garbage. Sounds like someone trying to justify their prebuilt purchase. This is all good advice. My advice, do it yourself. Its easier now than ever. Its like adult legos. And design a rig that will last a decade or two, and make you proud.

    • @JunniMkon
      @JunniMkon Месяц назад

      @@phillipcurrey6961 What do you think about the 45L Omen with a 4090? That's the prebuilt I'm going for. I just want my PC to do it all! One day I might get into building PCs myself but for now...

    • @Stock--Rosso
      @Stock--Rosso Месяц назад +2

      @@phillipcurrey6961 Read it again, especially the “NEVER BUY A PRE BUILT” part. There’s a difference between pre-built and custom build. In the UK, my living and reputation depend on the difference.

    • @TimmyTOnTheFly
      @TimmyTOnTheFly Месяц назад +12

      @@JunniMkonif you want to buy a pre built, so do it. That one is good. Don’t let these people bully you. If you want it, buy it 💯

  • @antondovydaitis2261
    @antondovydaitis2261 Месяц назад +50

    It's been almost exactly two years since I bought my budget gaming laptop for $700, and I knew then that I could not yet build a comparable PC myself at that time.
    I had a lot to learn.
    But now, after studying channels like yours, I am about to build my own budget gaming PC out of parts I sniped on discount one at a time.
    I am still a bit anxious about putting it all together, but the investment in knowledge and skill is well worth it.
    If this works out, I should be able to build another in a few years with a somewhat larger budget and a lot more performance.
    I am grateful for your channel.

  • @BigWillieStyle
    @BigWillieStyle Месяц назад +71

    2020 couldn't get a PS5, so I decided I'm going to build a PC.
    Found this channel.
    4 years later, I have 5 PC builds and am waiting for AMD 9000 chips to build my 6th.
    He isn't kidding about it becoming a hobby. It's addicting 😅

    • @reaverdropper2997
      @reaverdropper2997 Месяц назад +2

      Welcome to the club! I have been on a journey of building and upgrading gaming desktops over the past few months. It all started with a realization that my current setup was not meeting my performance needs, so I decided to make some changes. I began by upgrading my CPU, then moved on to improving my motherboard for better VRMs and overclocking capabilities. This led to a domino effect of upgrades, as I transferred components to new builds and purchased new ones to complete each desktop. One of the most exciting parts of this process was getting my hands on the 6700XT, my first new-gen AMD card. While I had a positive experience with previous AMD cards, I eventually found that the 6700XT couldn't handle some games at the high refresh rate I desired, so I upgraded to the 7800XT. However, I still found myself wanting more performance, which led me to the 7900 GRE. Despite not being the top-of-the-line AMD card, I was intrigued by a discount and decided to give it a try. After some negotiation, I was able to purchase the 7900 GRE for a great price and put it to the test.
      I got a free 240hz monitor from a client, but my current graphics card can't handle the games I want to play at that speed. I decided to upgrade to a 7800xt, which is slightly better and can run some games at 1440p with 200-290fps. However, I still wanted a GPU that could handle everything at 300fps+. I found a great deal on a 7900 GRE, but it wasn't the best AMD card available. I didn't want to spend over $500 on a card that wasn't the best, so I negotiated the price down to $349.99 and decided to give it a try. So end up taking that one home.
      So ofc I took the 6700 xt I had, and moved that out of the 2nd desktop, and made room for a 3rd desktop. Took the 7800xt from the main rig, and put that in the 2nd desktop. Then 7900 gre will be in the main rig.
      7900 gre 7900xt, 6700xt
      ryzen 9 5900x, ryzen 7 5800x, Ryzen 5 5600x
      64gigs ram 48 gigs ram 32 gigs ram
      So for me to break this vicious ass cycle, I'm just going to ...... end up buying a ryzen 9 9350xd platform, or a much better price intel i91300k/1400k for like 80 dollars more. Both those cpus are on amazon for like 400-500 dollars. But mainly I want to get either the 4080 super or the rx 7900xtx/ 4090. Though the 4090 might be the fasting gaming gpu in the market it still doesnt make sens to spend that kind of money on it lol.

    • @Drewkungfoo
      @Drewkungfoo Месяц назад +1

      It really is

    • @ddogbeast9412
      @ddogbeast9412 Месяц назад +1

      Had a ps5 but wanted to play xbox game. Let just say xbox took too long to drop their exclusive system seller so I opted to just build a pc

    • @BigWillieStyle
      @BigWillieStyle Месяц назад

      My reason is less justifiable 😅 I started out with a mid atx build. Intel/nvidia build that I could afford. Built off the foundation of running cyberpunk at 1440p. Just so happens turned out to be the Intel i5-10400f on a msi Z490 gaming edge wifi. With a msi 1660 super and t-force Vulcan Z DDR4 3000 16GB CL 16-18-18-38 1.35V ram.
      At the time. I believed it was the best build on planet Earth, and I was the only one who could play games such as cyberpunk smoothly without crashes.
      Truth is. I could play the game at launch. It's pretty smooth at 1440p, I might add. I even played other games without hiccups until 2022. That's when I realized how much my rig was limited when I built it thanks to callisto protocol...
      My issue was simply that cyberpunk was out, and I wanted to experience it the way It was supposed to be played. Now, I'm not going to lie. I achieved that, but I built my 1st PC with parts that were outdated already. I just saw they were cheap and performed to what I wanted at the time.
      People need to build with the expectation of it running games 5+ years from the day those parts were released. For me, I built it 2 years after those parts were on the market. And 2 years later. I wanted a new build. Now. Don't get me wrong, my youngest still plays that PC to this day on fortnight, and it works great. I'm just building like it's a challenge. Watching Centric and GeekaWhat videos to see what I can achieve. Lol
      Now I got 2 i7s with a 4070 ti and 4080 super. And 2 i5s with 4070 supers. All rocking DDR5 ram. Gen 5 and Gen 4 SSDs respectfully.
      This 6th build will honestly be my 1st AMD buld.

    • @BigWillieStyle
      @BigWillieStyle Месяц назад

      Also. Corsair MP 700 SSD is the storage to build off of. Both i7s builds were built off of it.

  • @The-Real-Kevin
    @The-Real-Kevin Месяц назад +12

    I watched hundreds of build videos before building my own and became addicted to watching them no matter high or low end pcs. It’s just a cool hobby.

  • @ManndoVR
    @ManndoVR 11 дней назад +7

    Im nervous about building PC and also buying one, there’s a Best Buy near me, I can check out what’s there first I just need help knowing how to stop worrying, this video helped me calm myself down and helped me understand how the pcs work.

    • @zingwilder9989
      @zingwilder9989 11 дней назад +5

      I hear you loud and clear. 19 years ago before I built my first PC, I was scared to death! However, after watching countless how-to videos on TigerDirect, I ordered the parts and took my time putting it together. When that thing booted, I was the happiest person in the world. I didn't experience one ounce of fear after that. Please believe me, if I can do it, you can too.

  • @powerface71
    @powerface71 Месяц назад +36

    I did one of PC Centric's builds, the AMD 7900 XTX GPU, Ryzen 7 7800X3D CPU, I sourced all the parts and it cost me under 2500 UDS! THANK YOU PC CENTRIC!!!!

    • @NolaMade7
      @NolaMade7 Месяц назад

      $2600 I have the same combo built mine in may of 2023
      Probably could’ve have saved a lil more if I didn’t get a $300 motherboard & $130 ram

    • @InsaneBean122
      @InsaneBean122 Месяц назад

      i built one same specs different cases and parts brand wise but same preformance all parts walk in and bought at microcenter for 1700 usd last month same system just different brands on sale at the time, i feel bad for anyone who cant go to a local microcenter , sorry if ya cant but ive found its absolutely the best option for dyi

    • @RonRon0110
      @RonRon0110 9 дней назад

      ​@@InsaneBean122I can go to micro center what deals did you get? I am going to get the 7800x3d motherboard ram combo but did they have good deals on GPUs?

  • @MasterInDiguise
    @MasterInDiguise 18 дней назад +3

    Microcenter built my pc and it was amazing. Chose all the parts, they gave me suggestions on my needs, and then built it.

    • @Jinkyuu1999
      @Jinkyuu1999 2 дня назад

      Exactly if you don't have the time and want custom parts! Choose and let someone build it professionally! I'm saving for a pc for myself

    • @user-gi2yd6tf5f
      @user-gi2yd6tf5f День назад

      I plan on doing the same

  • @x102reddragon
    @x102reddragon 9 дней назад +1

    I’ve done both. And definitely will be building going forward. The ability to make it yourself and have it work is such a rewarding experience.
    Just built my new rig close to a year ago and I love it

  • @letterkeys4440
    @letterkeys4440 Месяц назад +7

    I have absolutely zero interest spending hours diagnosing what component went wrong and going back and forth between computer shops. Prebuilt warranty is just a quality of life thing im willing to bite the bullet on

  • @xRECONCILEDX
    @xRECONCILEDX Месяц назад +3

    Also, staying organized with all the screws and parts while building help for first timers

  • @trev8591
    @trev8591 Месяц назад +6

    I did my first build in the mid-1990s (a 486 DX2-66 system). Hooked from then on and turned the passion into a full-time job and a small business (and still a hobby helping friends with their builds). I suppose I'm what you'd call REALLY "Old Skool"!

  • @komakie
    @komakie Месяц назад +4

    Always build my own. It's funny, is cheaper, you learn stuff every time and you get to show off :P

  • @YuniorGamboa
    @YuniorGamboa Месяц назад +2

    I bought mine pre-built from Nzxt because a friend recommended it and they have been a great investment.
    When making the order I had another guy who bought his from Scratch but helped choose the best part for my rig.
    Throughout the years, I have been learning and upgrading the parts and now I have no problem building one on my own.

  • @gdr1174
    @gdr1174 Месяц назад +2

    Thanks to channels like this I feel confident enough to build my own this year. Also half the fun involves the research.

  • @davidrojas9650
    @davidrojas9650 Месяц назад +2

    I spent about 3 years of reasearching pc gaming. I decided to go with a pre built pc as my first rig for many reasons( I love this pc). Mainly because coming from counsel, i have no knowledge besides all the research and videos i saw on building pcs and all. Bought the pre built for me to be able to turn all that research to hands on learning and experience. Now I am building my second rig, which is my first pc. i built myself.

  • @kingscrub3386
    @kingscrub3386 Месяц назад +1

    When I did my research leading up to the build of my pc, and this channel helped me get comfortable and familiar with my parts. You even had some builds that used parts I bought so i was able to see the basics of how things work. My brother describes it best I think, "PC building is just adult Lego."

  • @ASOGAMERS
    @ASOGAMERS Месяц назад +4

    I’m building my second pc now. I started buying parts a few months ago, only if the price was significantly discounted. I just picked up a XFX Merc 7900xtx today for $869 at Best Buy. I have the CPU, Ram, and more storage left. I’m waiting to see if the 9000 series CPU’s are going to be. worth it. In the end, I’m going to have saved approximately $450 on my build by waiting for sales.

  • @AntonioPerez18
    @AntonioPerez18 Месяц назад +22

    I bought a prebuilt from Best Buy and I couldn’t be happier with it. The specs are: Ryzen 5 5500, RTX 4060, 1TB of NVME 4 SSD, 600 PSU, 16GB of DDR4 RAM, all on a B550 motherboard. I do eventually wanna upgrade the RAM, motherboard, and CPU one day.

    • @bradleygregory6280
      @bradleygregory6280 Месяц назад

      Yea maybe in next 2 years upgrade cpu

    • @ben7445
      @ben7445 Месяц назад

      How much did it cost you

    • @stephenholmgren405
      @stephenholmgren405 27 дней назад +2

      I think I bought that exact one, too. $1700 it's awesome

    • @MSOkraMan
      @MSOkraMan 9 дней назад

      This is the way.

  • @whitson6777
    @whitson6777 Месяц назад +1

    "Richard Head" - very good - Also the absolute elation when you fire up the home-built for the first time and it works, unmatched!

  • @Fiscally_Responsible_DMH51
    @Fiscally_Responsible_DMH51 Месяц назад +5

    I went through Corsair and purchased their Premium Build Kit, which came with:
    Intel Core i9-13900K
    NVIDIA RTX 4090 FE
    Corsair 64GB Vengeance RGB DDR5-6000
    Corsair MP600 CORE XT 2TB PCIe 4.0 (Gen4) x4 NVMe M.2 SSD
    MSI Z790-A WIFI DDR5 Pro Motherboard
    Corsair RMe 1000W PSU
    Corsair H150iELITE Capellix XT Liquid CPU Cooler
    Corsair 5000D Airflow Case with 4 Corsair AF 120 RGB Elite Fans
    I was very fortunate because I only paid $3,299.98 (with tax $3,572.24) during their August 2023 deal, a savings of $400, and I experienced how to build a PC myself.

    • @GoldenCrow320
      @GoldenCrow320 8 дней назад

      hmmm, I don't have that budget. But i made an online pc build for 1600 $. Do you think it's good?
      Processor (CPU) AMD Ryzen 7 7700X 8-Core Processor (4.5GHz-5.4GHz/40MB CACHE/AM5)
      Motherboard ASUS® TUF GAMING X670E-PLUS WIFI (AM5, DDR5, PCIe 5.0, Wi-Fi 6E)
      Memory (RAM) 32GB Corsair VENGEANCE DDR5 5200 MHz (2 x 16GB)
      Graphics Card 8GB NVIDIA GEFORCE RTX 3050 - HDMI, DP, LHR
      SSD Drive 256GB PCS PCIe M.2 SSD (up to 3200 MB/s Read, 2700 MB/s Write)
      Power Supply CORSAIR 550W CX SERIES™ CX-550
      Processor Cooling PCS FrostFlow 100 V3 Series high-performance CPU cooler
      Sound Card HIGH DEF AUDIO (STANDARD) 6 CHANNEL (5.1) INTEGRATED
      Network Card 2.5Gbe LAN PORT
      Monitor ASUS TUF GAMING VG27VH1B 27" - 1920 x 1080, VA, 165 Hz
      Keyboard and Mouse LOGITECH® MK540 WIRELESS KEYBOARD AND MOUSE COMBO

    • @das3tins768
      @das3tins768 2 дня назад +1

      @@GoldenCrow320 nah man, the 3050 gotta get replaced. also why use such a high-end cpu with a weak gpu. get a ryzen 7600, pair it with a 7600 xt or a 6800 used, get 16 gb rams instead and upgrade the 256gb to 1tb atleast. that should make it better. ALso replace the cooler with a peerless assasian, that way u can even upgrade to a future am5 chip (9000 series amd - 11000 series) later on

    • @GoldenCrow320
      @GoldenCrow320 2 дня назад

      @@das3tins768 thank you, i already noticed it was bullshit by researching a bit more haha - -'

    • @GoldenCrow320
      @GoldenCrow320 2 дня назад

      @@das3tins768 yeah i noticed that it was bullshit. thank you for the feedback

  • @calabemccool
    @calabemccool Месяц назад +6

    I recommend doing research on parts and pcs for a week or two. If you get interested enough then build 100%. If you can’t take all the random numbers, names, and specs then fold and get prebuilt.

  • @jerrycurls88
    @jerrycurls88 Месяц назад +2

    Once you go DIY, you'll never buy prebuilt again. Had someone build my first back in the early 90's (i486DX2-50). Thats was the last PC I've owned that I didnt built. It's really not hard at all and you'll get the added benefit of being able to troubleshoot. You will save money and have much higher quality parts. Prebuilts are mostly C tier parts throw together for maximum profits. With DIY, you either end up with a lower total price or upgraded components. Very little downside and most issues can be resolved with a quick youtube/reddit search.

  • @heshbonesdempsey793
    @heshbonesdempsey793 Месяц назад +1

    I would like to thank you 🙏🏻 I built my first pc about a month ago and I did it by watching your videos! Never even had a computer and building it was easy for someone with no prior experience.

  • @Firestorm2056
    @Firestorm2056 Месяц назад +25

    Personally I think you should get your first PC pre-built or built by a family member or someone you trust, then learn how it works that way your next PC you can build yourself, save a lot of money and know exactly what you want out of it, and don’t get prebuilt one from a system integrator.

    • @priincebrvce7213
      @priincebrvce7213 Месяц назад +4

      I took a huge gamble and built mine myself. It helped that for months, I did a combination of intense research, watching tutorials, deciding which parts to get with and wait for sales of certains parts and so on.

    • @ezoez7548
      @ezoez7548 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@priincebrvce7213 i built mine raw no rubber no prep time. Watched tutorials as i was trying to put it together and after 5 days i had a pc lol. Shit is easy when u read and watch videos. Had faulty air cooler but all i had to do was just replace it lol.

    • @priincebrvce7213
      @priincebrvce7213 Месяц назад

      @@ezoez7548 lol

    • @priincebrvce7213
      @priincebrvce7213 Месяц назад

      @@ezoez7548 lol

    • @user00merc
      @user00merc Месяц назад +3

      I just built my first PC last Thursday with a friend. He basically just let me do everything and guided me on what to do. When I didn’t feel confident in doing something he did it for me while I watched

  • @stickylotus
    @stickylotus 19 дней назад

    Purchased a budget pc and decided to upgrade, I have been eat, breath and sleep pc's for the last month and I'm still nervous as hell. I'm going to shut myself away like a hermit cause I guarantee someone will decide that's the day to ask me of something. Your videos have helped me understand pc building a lot. Thank you

  • @PVCGolf
    @PVCGolf 6 дней назад

    Loving the video. I’m a 40 year old with zero computer rizz. But I’m looking at upgrading my son’s system. Hopefully it’s something we can learn & do together. Subbed & binging now.

  • @carcar5911
    @carcar5911 13 дней назад +1

    I want to build a gaming pc to play vr wireless to my quest 3 through virtual desktop. I want the best possible gaming experience.. what do you recommend. I won't be using it for any flat screen gaming. Only streaming to my quest 3 vr. Windows 10

  • @Kakashi_HMC
    @Kakashi_HMC 6 дней назад

    thanks alot you boosted my confidence . i was thinking of buying an already built one, but after watching this video and the £500 gaming pc build , ive decided to make it my self

  • @Joeker8171
    @Joeker8171 Месяц назад +9

    I think definitely build

  • @HaruuyukiOP
    @HaruuyukiOP Месяц назад +1

    i love building so i buy parts and build at own :D
    the best tip i can say a person who wanna build the first pc: read the motherboardbook and at some cases the casebook there is all easy explained.

  • @wazjoony
    @wazjoony Месяц назад

    IMO it's always better to build! I built my gaming PC from scratch on my channel and although it was my first time, I learned a lot and it turned out better than expected. Now I know my PC in and out and I can upgrade whenever I am ready :)

  • @westfield90
    @westfield90 Месяц назад +1

    I wanted to build but couldn’t beat the price of the Costco PC I purchased two weeks ago. I5 14400F, 32gb ddr5, 2TB NVMe, 4060 GPU in a Phantex fish tank case with 8 RGB fans. For $899

    • @johntzh6408
      @johntzh6408 12 дней назад +1

      Really?

    • @westfield90
      @westfield90 12 дней назад

      @@johntzh6408actually the deal is back and even better. For Labor Day the price is now $849.

  • @BetarayBillLover
    @BetarayBillLover Месяц назад

    I actually just built my first PC and it can be very stressful ngl especially once things start going wrong and you don’t know what it can be, but (knock on wood) I have had it up and running well for about a month now and it’s very rewarding

  • @GamerofGamesGG
    @GamerofGamesGG Месяц назад

    Build, build, build. I spent 2,200 on a 4080s 7800x3d pre-build. Apart from those 2 things. Every other components were cheap and corners were clearly cut. I spent another 800 on top to upgrade everything myself.
    If I bought the parts and built myself, build would have cost me 1,900-2,000 at most.
    All the information you need are in the manual, then you have RUclips, Google, Reddit and the internet for full support. RUclipsrs like PC Centric give you confidence.

  • @SNFDNSD
    @SNFDNSD Месяц назад

    You can order a custom built pc. Usually they charge $50-100 depending on the build. Setting up the OS or water cooling usually costs extra

  • @JomeFromWork
    @JomeFromWork Месяц назад

    Buying pre-built is the last thing I would do. Usually you're paying more with not much of a performance.
    I was supposed to buy a pre built then they send out the part list with my budget I was disappointed.
    Researched for 2 weeks for the parts and watching tutorials I've done it with ease + it's really really fun building one.
    From high end 1080p gaming prebuilt to midrange 1440p personal build is actually bunkers.

  • @shannonbrooks3322
    @shannonbrooks3322 Месяц назад

    Power supplies, upgradability, proprietary components and software, compatibility, your personal diy ability, of course budget,all things you should consider and research.

  • @crm484
    @crm484 Месяц назад

    Its never been easier to seek info for different parts. I saved about 350 dollars, and got 1tb extra and better motherboard and psu by building myself. Never opened a pc before. I have just followed instructions from different youtubers. PC Centric as one of them😊

  • @conjurorofcheaptricks8944
    @conjurorofcheaptricks8944 Месяц назад

    I just built my own pc for the first time ever, I was surprised about how straightforward it was when I just did it step by step with help from the manual the motherboard came with and videos especially the Linus tech tip one, it’s mostly anxiety that makes you feel it’s impossible for you to do but watching a few videos takes all that away.

  • @Morrodin182
    @Morrodin182 Месяц назад

    Personally I would really advice people to go option 1 or 2 as well. I have been gaming since I was a kid in the 80s and have had pre-built PCs and custom built ones (both by myself or by an SI) and the custom built ones are just more dependable, especially once you decide it is time to upgrade your pc. I remember in the late 2000s where I had an Acer PC and I decided I wanted to upgrade the damn thing and it was just impossible due to how it had been built. (it had an integrated video card and no free slot on the mobo for a dedicated GPU)
    My latest PC (only a month old :D) I bought from a company which does build them for you if you like. It has been a great experience as they allow you full selection of the hardware you like and were very transparant about the assembly cost (they charge €150 for building and testing the PC + provide warranty on the build). Although I am capable of building a PC myself and have done so for a colleague at work not that long ago, I did choose to pay the extra cost just to not have to build it myself and it worked out great.
    Anyway just my few cents! :)

  • @UnbeltedSundew
    @UnbeltedSundew Месяц назад

    Also it's worth pointing out you can take a practice run at an inexpensive build before going to high end parts. Buy used parts or pcs and put them together in a new machine. It can be daunting if you just dropped a couple of thousand and it doesn't boot and you are too stressed to figure out why on your first time building.

  • @theSCARB
    @theSCARB Месяц назад +7

    Buildbuildbuild
    1:35 lol ive been researching for 4 years at this point😅
    (Build)

    • @ANGRYWOLVERINE2060-ft2nc
      @ANGRYWOLVERINE2060-ft2nc Месяц назад

      You can buy a good pc with a 7700x amd cpu or its comparative ibm cpu and a 4700 super or its comparative amd gpu with 16 gb of ram for 1300-1500 dollars. Way easier than building one. Lenovo has some pcs in that price ranger and yes I just bought one. Maybe I will try to build one again.I tried building one a few years back and gave up .I may try again so meday.
      But since you can buy a pc for almost the same price as you would spend building one it's no longer true that you save a lot of money building your own.

    • @theSCARB
      @theSCARB Месяц назад

      ​@@ANGRYWOLVERINE2060-ft2nc I do understand why some people will buy instead of building. I was kinds joking ig

  • @jibrilamvs
    @jibrilamvs Месяц назад

    I want to build my own for two reasons.
    1. It’s more fun and you learn stuff.
    2. I can avoid all the bloatware and preinstalled trial software stuff which comes installed with pre built machines.

    • @wazjoony
      @wazjoony Месяц назад

      and you can upgrade it whenever you want later on cuz you'll know everything about your PC

  • @GMan-ku9wg
    @GMan-ku9wg Месяц назад

    I've built mine and it's true that you do get a lot of enjoyment out of doing it yourself. I do agree though it can have its problems especially when things go wrong, but if like me you like learning new things then go for it. It's also true to say it's not for everyone as it does take time (yep hours,) upgrading is the biggest plus which is something I'm doing right now. in the end though it depends on how easy you want to make things for yourself and if you have the time to build it yourself, which is why it's good to have the other options.

  • @spikeimperial
    @spikeimperial Месяц назад

    If going prebuilt. Keep in mind lenovo has been in the game for as long as people remember those thinkpad laptops with the red bump in the middle. So those keyboards have been getting refined since then.
    Went with one of those for my younger brothers mech engineering course and he has been happy so far.

  • @Vialli100.
    @Vialli100. Месяц назад

    I purchased a pre-built once years ago, voided the warranty 3 months later by upgrading it!
    I would definitely say build it yourself, you get exactly what you want..

    • @wazjoony
      @wazjoony Месяц назад

      agree 100%

    • @GanymedeXD
      @GanymedeXD 17 дней назад

      You do not void the warranty by upgrading! Common misperception! Only if your upgrading causes the damage/fault, then they might refuse warranty actions to be carried out. But this they always try an way.

  • @joeleder
    @joeleder 7 дней назад

    100% you should build. You kearn something useful and you'll get a much better bang for your buck. Most pre builds i fond cut corners in some way. Some worse than others. And theyll always have inflated prices for the build fees.

  • @pat5602
    @pat5602 Месяц назад

    as a loyal apple user, I recently learned the joys of using PC, lol. I would use a pc once in a while but I keep going back to Mac. I learned all about it in the last few months and I just built my first rig. If I can do it, you can too! There's a ton of resources online and websites that could help you decide on components and compatibility.

  • @JohnDoe-bz4yl
    @JohnDoe-bz4yl Месяц назад

    My first PC was a prebuilt but that's going back a very long time
    I prefer the flexibility of building my own PC instead of the cookie cutter prebuilts

  • @NorthWolfe
    @NorthWolfe 7 дней назад

    Option 3 = Pure unadulterated cow manure. I have never seen a good one yet unless one spends a fortune. Garbage.
    Option 2 = I have 3 shops where I buy my parts, all of them have the option to assemble those parts you bought for around 150 Euros. So, it will be the same as option 1, aside from a small waiting period. One of them even allows you to assemble your PC in one of the booths they have, so if you run into any issues scream HELP!
    Option 3 = The best option, assuming you have the space to assemble it and choose the right case for it (that's my pet peeve since some cases are a nightmare to work on).
    Since I do not do RGB, cable management is not an issue. However, for those wanting a Christmas Tree that is something to take into account.
    Aside from using power tools in some cases, in more than 20 years I never broke anything I didn't want to brake ;)
    Cheers.

  • @projectxgaming
    @projectxgaming 28 дней назад

    I always chose the parts i want to buy then consulting with the firm im going to purchase from if they're compatible and then paying them to built themselves.
    First one is: i5-4670; gtx 1050ti; (10 ys ago)
    Second one is: i5-13600kf; rtx 3070 and so far im loving the new PC

  • @Alphaaussiegaming
    @Alphaaussiegaming Месяц назад

    I recently bought mine from a company here in Australia called aftershock and it is the exact pc that I would of wanted if I was going to build it the size,parts,price,performance,looks is all spot on amazing there’s room for upgrades if I ever want to go to an aio cooler which is basically all I would change really the aftershock branded cpu cooler is great and does more than enough for temps I would like to always keep temps as low as possible if I ever decide to really start pushing the system

  • @asherdales
    @asherdales Месяц назад

    I'd say build if you have interest in diy. If you just want to game without worrying then find a reputable SI and find one in your budget. Most SI's will have fps numbers with each tier. Also going with a mid range prebuilt allows for the opportunity to learn about hardware with upgrading in the future.

  • @outlet6989
    @outlet6989 Месяц назад

    I don't know if you covered this. Some PCs are built using proprietary components, such as the MB and/or the PSU, and worst of all, the actual power cables, which will only connect to their PSUs.

  • @weirdwalkingdeadtheorys370
    @weirdwalkingdeadtheorys370 7 дней назад

    Hey buddy I know literally nothing about pcs I found one on Amazon for over 5 grand it’s called the Panorama Gaming PC (GeForce RTX 4090, Intel 24-Core i9-14900KS CPU, 192GB DDR5 RAM, 4TB Gen4 990 Pro SSD + 12TB HDD, WiFi 7, W11 Pro) Best 2024 Prebuilt RGB Tower Desktop Computer for Gamers
    Would you recommend this one, if not what is the best prebuild money can buy?

  • @dood1234DOOD
    @dood1234DOOD Месяц назад

    New to PC gaming and I learned the very hard expensive lesson of just build your PC. Save up, do your research, read reviews and ask the guy at the store questions you have. And have lots of patience.

  • @grahamsmith2753
    @grahamsmith2753 Месяц назад

    I had the computer company build the PC of my choice. This is what I did with Scan Computers...though my PC is now VERY old.

  • @Cameronms28
    @Cameronms28 Месяц назад +6

    Built my first pc ever last month (7800x3d+7900gre) and it was easy now I play my favorite games at plus 200fps I’m happy as hell

    • @cibulis5347
      @cibulis5347 Месяц назад

      but it cost a fortune :(

    • @jordanmntungwa3311
      @jordanmntungwa3311 Месяц назад

      @@cibulis5347 Just wait 9 years then we can buy those parts for cheap. gaming won't have evolved much and also you'll be able to download today's games for cheap.

    • @xPhantomxify
      @xPhantomxify Месяц назад

      You're happy now, because it simply works and is enough for you, but wait a year and games suddenly cant run anymore. Then you will be sad as hell.

    • @Elvyne
      @Elvyne Месяц назад +1

      ​@@xPhantomxify"Can't run anymore"? Maybe in Ultra. But it won't suddenly cripple to trash graphics in the span of two years. People are still keeping their 1080Ti alive 8 years later!

    • @TuanAnh-tk9wp
      @TuanAnh-tk9wp 7 дней назад

      Im still play my favorite game(dota2) by a 1050 gtx 8 years old untill now lol

  • @RandomCryptoHodler
    @RandomCryptoHodler Месяц назад

    Microcenter takes forever to build PCs but they do great wire management. If you are comfortable with building it yourself and don't mind buying more parts if you break during build than sure go build yourself.

  • @gezimlimoni2319
    @gezimlimoni2319 Месяц назад

    First PC i bought it already built long time a go, very weak PC,,,,2020 ordered parts by my choice, of course, watching your and other inputs, ordered parts and so far perfect AM4,,, just i had a guy for a little money installed all parts! Very happy with my build, and now awaiting combo deal with 7800x3d, will see how it goes 😂

  • @greenbeetless
    @greenbeetless Месяц назад

    I bought a prebuilt and just upgrade it. Sometimes you can buy a pc that’s cheaper than you making it.

  • @likilikiki
    @likilikiki 22 дня назад

    I've done all 3 options and all 3 were 100% fine.

  • @keblin86
    @keblin86 Месяц назад

    I set my first PC on fire when I built. Well the motherboard lol. Didn't know about the standoffs back then. Never forgot that lesson :D

  • @DJW2540
    @DJW2540 Месяц назад

    Well, where do I start . Love the channel . One of your builds inspired and gave me the confidence to build my first high-end PC . But I'm absolutely aggravated, disappointed, and stressed with my new paper weight . It looks amazing. But the topic is on point for the issues I've run into . It's a gamingPC, but my game keeps crashing . All this with hours of trouble shooting and paying someone $65 to fix it . And still no solution. So maybe building a PC can definitely be more than you bargain for . The assembly was awesome and rewarding after the RGB came on . But the amount I spent for it to sit is ridiculous .

  • @dareka9425
    @dareka9425 Месяц назад

    I build my own PCs.
    I offer advice to my family and friends to what kind of PC they should buy.

  • @mikeshadez
    @mikeshadez Месяц назад +1

    When you build your own PC with your own two hands you will appreciate it more and you feel like frankinstein building a monster seeing it come to life, anyone buying a desktop pc most likely will catch dust, building a pc can be confusing at first but when you figure it out do some reseach it is pretty easy plug in screw in install and it's cheaper getting the parts yourself and your learn a skill, If you can't! never buy one of walmart or pc repair shops they'll mostly likely will sell you a potato or something on it is faulty always buy from specialists that can tell you about what your buying show off what it can do and locate your closest pc repair shop just for maintenance desktops are like cars sometimes they need service, but build baby build.

  • @erikwhitney7403
    @erikwhitney7403 26 дней назад

    @PCCENTRIC I dont know much about computers. But want a gaming computer. Will have to have a PC place build it. Looking for a desk top computer. Need a good case and what parts to get. I want everything to be white and no more than 22" depth and around $3200. I have all white acer monitor, razor keyboard and mouse and headphone and g2000 white speakers.

    • @GanymedeXD
      @GanymedeXD 17 дней назад

      No knowledge & experience is no reason not to build an own one! Simply inform yourself! Just learn what the needed components are … inform yourself what you want/need, check if they are compatible, then choose a nice case. Then start buying the parts and case and finally … just put it together. From idea to build took me less than a couple of months with absolutely zero experience. I watched building clips, tips and read up on where I needed extra knowledge … I originally only wanted to upgrade my pre-build one … step by step I exchanged the old components till the case became too tight … ending up buying a new case. I never ever worked on PC’s before … always used pre-build ones … in November started the upgrade plan … 4 weeks later I basically had a new setup and 4 more weeks later I finished building my first high end gaming PC … not even a basic setup … but a monster setup with 16 case fans, plenty of shiny lights and all the required eye candy stuff like premium wiring … even packing more stuff in to top it … like extra hard-disc fans …

  • @toonnut1
    @toonnut1 Месяц назад

    Build is the only way for me its so easy and you know your not buying junk

  • @davidcole2337
    @davidcole2337 Месяц назад

    Simple Answer is how Technically are you at doing a Custom Build. One Option is MicroCenter. You can pick the parts and they will Config it for a Flat Price.. If you are Technically than build it and save the money. Last option would be buying Pre-Build because Acer, Dell, HP always use Power Supplies that are under powered if you are a Gamer and like to upgrade your Dedicated GPU.

  • @lancefloyed9091
    @lancefloyed9091 Месяц назад

    Love your vids man really do your videos inspired me to switch to pc a month ago thank you keep up the great videos🔥👍

  • @user-gi2yd6tf5f
    @user-gi2yd6tf5f День назад

    If anybody has the time can you breakdown something for me. I plan on getting it built by the microcenter. I want to play games like rdr2 & gta fivem, sim racing and so on. What should I get?😂 I’m clueless

  • @coleregas8782
    @coleregas8782 13 дней назад

    I'm thinking of either building myself or using microcenter's build your own. MC has up to 3 years no questions asked warranty and pickup same day fully built. If I build myself I can save about $500-600 though. Does anyone know if it's worth it for the extra safety net? If ANYTHING went wrong with the PC I could bring it into MC and they will repair or replace no questions asked basically.

  • @9espanatorres
    @9espanatorres Месяц назад +2

    How can you make sure all the components you pick are compatible? This is my biggest concern.

    • @zingwilder9989
      @zingwilder9989 Месяц назад

      You'll find that RUclips videos are remarkably valuable for making the right decisions.

    • @Frank_Pods
      @Frank_Pods Месяц назад +1

      Always choose the CPU first, then find a motherboard that uses the same CPU socket, then find the RAM supported

    • @Elvyne
      @Elvyne Месяц назад

      In doubt, PCPartPicker!

  • @timothy2055
    @timothy2055 Месяц назад

    I buy a pc from a place but it had defect and it burn the motherborad so be care what bored you but and I'm try to buy new pc but cant cost to much I cant even work with my hand want to weak out on me so im stuck with nothing to eran money

  • @CYB3R2K
    @CYB3R2K Месяц назад +10

    Just buy pre built guys... I'm literally negated to do mechanic stuff and if you don't care about the nerd side of PC gaming plus just want a "mostly" plug and play experience, pre built is the way to go.

  • @VautourDX
    @VautourDX Месяц назад +1

    The days of saving money by building it yourself are gone at the high-end. Buying a pre-built saves money.

  • @jacoblynch9862
    @jacoblynch9862 Месяц назад

    My two cents I completely understand the allure of a prebuilt system having said that please do a little bit of homework and don’t ever buy an alien wear computer. They look really cool but in lots of cases, they highly lack proper cooling. You will be paying for a $600 processor and getting a $300 processor performance out of it, I would like to make a beginner motherboard looks very daunting. However, everything is labeled and everything has its own place. Example the processor has one place it can go in now. Yes, you have to line it up properly, but it has markings on it to do that your ram only goes in, one place on the motherboard, but that’s kind of my point all your components typically have a specific slot or place that they will fit into built as I can’t really use computers anymore due to my health problems but once you have built your first one you realize it’s not that difficult

  • @RlCHARDRANS0M
    @RlCHARDRANS0M Месяц назад +1

    Hey would you be able to make a console streaming pc-meaning you would only have it to stream and record videos and not game

  • @videogamephenomhd
    @videogamephenomhd Месяц назад +1

    If you have the brains and brawn by learning how to build it, just build it. But if you cannot do it, leave it to the experienced.

    • @GanymedeXD
      @GanymedeXD 17 дней назад

      Its less about brains and brawn … its mainly about time … to learn how to do it … plan and check your desired setup … buy the stuff and then putting it together … with zero experience I accidentally build my own one upgrading the old one … took me 2 months from not knowing what needs to be in there till I finished having build a high end monster pc. Alongside work it had been impossible …was ‘lucky’ I was off sick and had plenty of time.

  • @Haru_no_ki
    @Haru_no_ki 14 дней назад

    I still prefer building mine. Built all my rigs from 14 and now im 24. Start with cheap parts if you have fear of breaking the parts. The pluses are that I can chose the exact theme, I can customize, I can mix new with used/open box parts and I can avoid Asus and EK. Most of the time, pre builts use shit rams(or dont turn on docp/xmp and 100% the customer wont know how to do it), shit psu, cheap out on cases and fans or mobo.

  • @Frank_Pods
    @Frank_Pods Месяц назад

    If you've never built a PC before, here's a good starting point for reference
    Ryzen 7 5700G (Includes a cooler & graphics)
    B550 mATX Motherboard
    32GB DDR4 3200Mhz (Maximum speed supported)
    Any Sata SSD
    Any tower case
    500w power supply or higher
    That's all you need. There's no soldering needed, everything just slots together like Lego. Have fun!

  • @zingwilder9989
    @zingwilder9989 Месяц назад

    Just in my opinion, purchasing a quality (customized) machine from an SI is going to be an expensive venture. Beyond that, if something goes wrong and you have no idea how to troubleshoot, you'll need to reach in your pocket deeper. My advice to anyone wanting a gaming PC is "learn to build." The money that you will save and the knowledge that you will gain will make it completely worthwhile.

    • @GanymedeXD
      @GanymedeXD 17 дней назад

      Buying a customised one is the easiest option … you get it delivered in working order with your dream components … simply plug & play … there you got no problems with troubleshooting … any problem you have 24/7 support. You run into problems you have their hotline and someone is at your home in 24 hours to look at it. Always did it like that. The prices vary from fair to extreme. Building your own one you are on your own with everything and all probable problems which there might be a million problems … solving this is time consuming … much more than building it. I built my high end gaming pc’s so know how frustrating it is if it does not respond how you want it to … as your own creation there is nobody to help with trouble shooting … trying to identify a problem takes ages … then you might have to de-assemble and get new parts … my first build had a broken main board … this disappointment of first switching it on … and … nothing on the screen … happy fault identifying … impossible if you have to work.

  • @jorgedavidgomez5630
    @jorgedavidgomez5630 Месяц назад +1

    I built my PC almost 8 years ago and still running strong

    • @Frank_Pods
      @Frank_Pods Месяц назад

      What CPU, RAM & GPU do you have?

    • @jorgedavidgomez5630
      @jorgedavidgomez5630 Месяц назад +1

      @@Frank_Pods Core i7 7700 Kaby Lake, Corsair 32gb DDR4 3000 Mhz 15C Ram, Gigabyte Aorus Geforce GTX 1080 Ti Xtreme Edition 11G mounted on Asus Prime Z270-A :)

    • @jorgedavidgomez5630
      @jorgedavidgomez5630 Месяц назад

      I remember I spent around $2k including peripherals, over the years I have upgraded my monitors, most recently the m.2 and a new mice, for what I do with this computer, gaming mostly, its more than enough, I think I can keep going for two or three more years 👍

  • @Vialli100.
    @Vialli100. 17 дней назад

    It did as the warranty void stickers had to be removed..
    This was many years ago..

    • @GanymedeXD
      @GanymedeXD 17 дней назад

      Upgrading does not void warranty regardless if you must remove the void stickers … they always they but legally fail … it only voids warranty if you messed up and caused the problem by upgrading.

  • @andre97621
    @andre97621 Месяц назад +1

    Firet build, won't post, cant fix it I'm sad and frustrated

  • @sorijin
    @sorijin 19 дней назад

    Do yourself a favor and learn to assemble at least one amazing pc for yourself or someone, it's incredibly satisfying particularly if you get all fresh and fast new parts!

  • @Platinum199
    @Platinum199 Месяц назад

    build but pray u dont get a faulty component like i did. My gpu was faulty and its been a nightmare dealing with msi and their returns. Got returned a gpu that had a new issue and had a noticeable bend to it. Its been over a month coming onto 2 to get returned a fully functioning gpu

  • @liammorris1018
    @liammorris1018 Месяц назад

    Did mine 2 weeks ago after watching your videos, something’s making a horrible noise though so going to go through and tighten everything tonight hopefully that solves the issue.

    • @marknewellmusic
      @marknewellmusic Месяц назад +1

      Don't just 'tighten everything', could cause damage by overtightening things eg CPU cooler.
      Troubleshoot each thing that is making noise eg check fans first to see if it's a fan causing it, then check each component eg psu fan, gpu fans, grinding is a moving part issue and likely fans, make sure no fan blades are catching on cables or parts of the case etc...
      Good luck 👍

    • @liammorris1018
      @liammorris1018 Месяц назад +1

      @@marknewellmusic i'm not sure where the noise is coming from to be honest, it's mega annoying though, i did think coilwhine but apparently that's constant. just hope it's not my GPU. i'll have to do some investigating thanks for the tip though i'll be doing my best not to over tighten anything xD

    • @liammorris1018
      @liammorris1018 Месяц назад +1

      @@marknewellmusic I do believe it was a loose screw on top of the cpu radiator. Will update if the problem persists, fingers crossed if it was that, as it was literally the first thing i checked xD

    • @marknewellmusic
      @marknewellmusic Месяц назад +1

      @@liammorris1018 Nice!

    • @PcCentric
      @PcCentric  Месяц назад +1

      Rubber washers can be used to dampen rads and HDDs if you're getting vibration

  • @wolfie35p
    @wolfie35p Месяц назад +8

    Absolutely 100% you should build your own pc, it costs less than any pre built pc bought from a retailer, and you get the sense of achievement, knowing you built it yourself, and it WORKS.

    • @kuparlyngdoh2952
      @kuparlyngdoh2952 Месяц назад

      Agreed 💯

    • @GanymedeXD
      @GanymedeXD 17 дней назад

      If you do not work … have no girlfriend … wife … kids … life yeah … otherwise impossible to combine … with full time work and demands of your loved ones! Divorce is more expensive than any ore-build …

  • @playyer82
    @playyer82 Месяц назад

    Can you make a video, for the Samsung Odyssey OLED G6, it has hdr10+ and its rare for a pc monitor to have that! Anyways, great video. 👍

  • @schweiserschweiser3397
    @schweiserschweiser3397 Месяц назад

    For my first build i will chose the parts over one site but u have option for 70e the montage so i it’s great. The site pre build overpriced and shit parts cheaps.

  • @DominicRuiz23
    @DominicRuiz23 Месяц назад +1

    Anyone know what happened to the personal rig? Is he still doing that?

  • @guitargust
    @guitargust 7 дней назад

    can you pls give me your opinion on this build i wanna get done by an SI online?
    Fractal Design North XL Charcoal Black TG Dark, window
    intel Core i7-14700, 8C+12c/28T, 2.10-5.40GHz
    Gigabyte RTX 4070 Super 12GB
    Kingston Fury Beast 32GB DDR5
    Samsung 990 EVO 1TB SSD
    ASUS Z790 Plus TUF Gaming
    4x Corsair LL120 fans
    Corsair iCUE H100i Elite LCD XT
    be quiet! Pure Power 12 M 850W ATX 3.0
    Microsoft Windows 11 Home 64Bit, DSP/SB (deutsch) (PC)
    its like 2500€ build included. but seems still bit overpriced.

  • @Buffalo_ill
    @Buffalo_ill Месяц назад +1

    Building is fun. Installing software not so much.

    • @Frank_Pods
      @Frank_Pods Месяц назад +1

      Windows updates on a fresh SSD install is painful

  • @jordancampbell875
    @jordancampbell875 23 дня назад

    I’m going to try and build my own pc wish me luck.

  • @curtismariani6303
    @curtismariani6303 Месяц назад

    Im always so disappointed to see low capacity NVME boot drives and HDD’s in mid to high end SI builds. You can usually remove but often the NVME options are either limited or over priced. As well as little PSU headroom limiting the ability to upgrade later. Again easy to replace if you know what you are doing, but then if you know what you are doing you could be self building.

  • @ykmyhomielizabeth
    @ykmyhomielizabeth Месяц назад +2

    Thank you for this! I am a 12 year old girl and I want to build my first pc. I’ve spent all day watching videos, trying to remember what I need to buy, taking notes, etc. I finally got so confused that I searched up which option was better (building yourself or pre built) and have come to a conclusion that I will make one. I understand the basic 8 things you need to build a pc but I don’t know everything i exactly need. I have found good parts for the pc but I have no idea if they work well with the motherboard or case. Every tutorial I have watched is great but I still just don’t understand what goes with what. My mom is willing to help me build one (I am doing chores for money) but she knows *nothing* about this subject and has never worked with pcs. If anyone can reply to my comment and tell me exactly what I need to build a full pc (I already have a Moniter, headset, mouse, mousepad, and keyboard) id be very grateful!! By the way I want to keep the price as cheap as possible but I know this is no cheap project.

    • @justluke8836
      @justluke8836 Месяц назад

      What is it you’re looking for? I’m sure we can help.

    • @ykmyhomielizabeth
      @ykmyhomielizabeth Месяц назад

      @@justluke8836 tbh i don’t rlly care i just want to play some games like fn

    • @justluke8836
      @justluke8836 Месяц назад

      @@ykmyhomielizabeth if its fortnite on low graphic settings then most low end graphics cards will work, whats your budget?

    • @ykmyhomielizabeth
      @ykmyhomielizabeth Месяц назад

      @@justluke8836 probably around 1k

    • @Elvyne
      @Elvyne Месяц назад

      If you're mostly worried about compatibility between components, know that PCPartPicker can help you a damn lot! I'm from Europe so prices weren't accurate for my region, but this allowed me to grab the parts that would suit to my needs. I only got the Mobo, cpu and GPU but it's slowly coming together!

  • @SamuraiJack50
    @SamuraiJack50 Месяц назад

    Hello PC Centric! I've been watching you only for the past couple weeks, and already love the channel. Lots of good info and you're very good with audience. I recently had a graphics problem with my pc, and was wondering if there's any way to contact you outside of youtube given I don't have anyone to help with this, and I don't know who to call

    • @JJFlores197
      @JJFlores197 Месяц назад

      Most of these tech channels don't do tech support. There's just too much liability and variables at play. You can try posting on pc help subreddits.