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Help On Building A Gaming Computer For Wow

Is building a computer cheaper than buying a pre-built one?

Building a gaming computer can be cheaper if you find the right parts at the right price. One the other hand, you could probably find a decent gaming computer at one of the sites you listed or other places as well.

My advice is to talk to this uncle. He is your family and would not lead you astray as some of the posters here. He may even hav a source or two for parts to build the computer.

Good luck.

EDIT: I disagree with Mark below. Most of the items he list are low to mid level with the exception of the video card. Also, the memory he links to is not on the ASUS vendor list and requires 1.8v (most of ASUS boards need memory rated for 1.95v) so this may present a problem or it may not. The board he recommends may very well support the RAM despite it not being on the qualified vendor list.

I could link you to a complete system as well, but he did a decent job overall so I will abstain.

Best Gaming Computers?

For gaming, definitely go with a desktop. It's hard to get decent gaming performance on laptops for under $1000, and they aren't upgradeable later on.

While the absolute best value for your dollar comes building from scratch, there are plenty of better deals. The first system isn't good for gaming- the graphics card is worthless and would have to be replaced, the processors is also rather slow.

Here's a much better (and cheaper) choice:

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.as...

Building from scratch you could get something much more powerul. Or you could spend another $150 to upgrade the graphics card and power supply on the this computer. But for WoW and Empire Total War, it wouldn't be necessary.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.as...

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.as...
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814150369

What should I keep in mind when building a computer?

Balance price and performance by picking components that are part of the new line and are modestly performant but not the highest end components. E.g. Spending an extra 300% on a CPU for an extra 20% performance in one area is just a waste if your primary purpose for the build is gaming. The money is better spent on a GPU where performance can widely vary by an extra 25% investment.Make sure parts are compatible by consulting vendor lists of approved combinations. Make sure to review forums on potential problems others have experienced in this regard. This is highly applicable for RAM, CPU, and motherboard combinations. E.g.: A vendor claims that a motherboard supports core i7 gen 7 . It turns out, you need to update the BIOS first for that support to kick in. How do you do that if you don't have a CPU that can not boot into the BIOS setup screen? E.g. 2: RAM you bought that operates at 1.7v but the motherboard can't provide that voltage.Avoid creating a bottleneck in any one part of the system by spending too much in one area and not enough in another. It's best to have decent performance across the board. E.g.: So you buy 64GB of RAM but cheap out on the solid state drive when your build is for gaming. A class 40 or 50 SSD will give you much faster load times where the extra 32GB of RAM is unlikely to provide much benefit for gaming.consider the TDP of the CPU and GPU in relation to the motherboard's and power supply's support. E.g. make sure the power supply provides more than the maximum required power by using a PSU calculator and ensure it has the right connectors in the right amount. E.g. 2: Make sure that you buy a 125W motherboard for a 125W TDP CPU.Consider the required cooling mechanisms beyond the stock cooler for the CPU and GPU based on your case and it's airflow patterns. E.g. : Some large GPUs create a hot spot towards the bottom of the case, which causes drives to fail.Don't overlook the noise factor of fans, wrattling components, or even power supply electrical whining. These noises add up when you're trying to focus on a quiet night. Keep some money to upgrade these after the fact if necessary.Don't forget that a mouse, keyboard, sound system, and monitor (and even desk) are part of the build. Sure, you can buy better ones later but it's nice to enjoy your new PC with an additional wow factor from a large high resolution monitor.

I would like to build a gaming pc. Can I get some help from Quora?

$700 is a decent amount for building a gaming PC. While selecting the components, you should go for a Quad core processor, At least 8 GB (or more) RAM, A 64 bit operating system (Windows 8 or 10)A decent graphics card that supports all the latest technologies and has at least 2 Gigabytes of dedicated video memoryAt least 1 Terabyte hard diskAn LCD/LED monitor that supports high resolution. I am not a big fan of flat screens, so I prefer 19''. Based on your preference, you may go up or down. However, the games you are primarily interested in are not too resource hungry. You can easily go buy with a 2-3 year old PC and still be able to play WoW or LoL with decent frame rates. For these games, a fast and reliable internet connection is much more important than GPU, RAM or processor. I had a Pentium Dual Core 2 Ghz PC with 4 GB Ram and 1 GB Vram, and both these games ran smoothly. With that budget, you can go for a laptop also, which might be more handy.

Affordable gaming computer for World Of Warcraft?

How cheap would you like it to be?
I would recommend spending at least around $700-800 for something decent.
I would say in this price point the best bet is AMD based machine either on Athlon II or Phenom II processors with frequency 3.0Ghz+ or overclocked. AMD is cheaper by a fat margin for computers below $1000. 4GB RAM is recommended today - no more no less. Windows 7 and any games will be smooth with 4GB and will rarely need more. Video card - while ATI 4670 or Nvidia GT 240 will be adequate, it's recommended to have something like 9800GT or ATI 5670, or better 5750. If you could get GTX 460 it would be absolute maximum you'll ever need for WOW.
Add case with good cooling, preferably aftermarket CPU cooler, 500+GB HDD and dvd recorder. You may need 500+W power supply from reliable brands like Antec , Cooler Master, Corsair, same brands are recommended for cases. Motherboard - 785G or 770 is enough and great at the same time - brands: MSI, Biostar cheaper ones, ASUS, Gigabyte more expensive.
Now setup with Athlon II X2 240 overclocked to 3.4Ghz with 4GB RAM and GT 240 will run WOW on 50-60FPS most of the times with occasional drop to 30FPS in most intense areas - but you'll not notice it easily. Upping CPU to Phenom II 555 and video to ATI 5750 will provide constant 50+ FPS.

I recommend Centaurus Computers - they have low prices and excelelnt quality, I would say the best around. They use parts I would use for my computer myself. Also they unlock cores on AMD as well as overclock CPU, RAM and video cards fro free. With free shipping and 3 year warranty they are the best. They have WOW optimized gaming computers - real ones, not Dellcrap. Paladin model is perfect for $799 shipped
Good luck

What kind of streaming PC would you build under $2000?

Wow all of those answers are incredibly idiotic. First of all intel is not top dog anymore. Zen CPUs have far superior performance in every category except they are just about a tie in single core performance.If you are streaming you want a zen CPU. They will shred an intel CPU.For a streaming rig under $2,000:Ryzen 2700 — $289/ threadripper 1920X — $550ASUS prime X470-pro — $165/ ASrock X399 — $320GTX 1080ti — $619/ Vega 64 — $489G.Skill TridentZ RAM 2x8GB 3200MHz — $175Samsung evo 500GB SSD — $100WD Black 2TB HHD — $105EVGA supernova 850W 80Plus gold — $110Windows 10 home — $99Never ever cheap out on a power supply. It's the most important part of the whole build, and if you spend the extra $20 to get the best it will last you 20 years.

Replacing Motherboard and RAM on computer... tips?

You may as well build from stratch, since replacing a motherboard is going to mean unplugging everything and reattaching everything. Think about the motherboard as the chassis of a car -- if you're replacing it, you're basically rebuilding the car.

Building a computer isn't as difficult as it sounds. Do a little research for hints and tips before you start. I did my first build a couple years back.

• Choose your processor
• Pick a motherboard that matches the socket type of your processor. Important factors are the form factor (size), RAM slots, expansion slots, onboard sound/video, ports.
• Get a case to match your mobo form factor. Mostly an aestetic issue, but the case is going to dictate cooling capability (small cases with bad airflow make your PC run hot!), as well as your expansion options.
• Get the rest of the hardware: hard drive, optical drive, video card (opt), RAM, a power supply strong enough (most home applications get by with 500W, doesn't hurt to have more), operating system, and any other bells and whistles.

The actual build shouldn't take more than an evening.

Lay out your stuff.
Attach the processor to the motherboard, then the cooling unit.
Place and secure the motherboard inside the case.
From there, it's all about plugging things in (correctly -- read your mobo manual!), then powering up and hoping you hear the correct beep codes. Good luck!

What is an affordable PC build in India for playing WoW and running some additional applications?

You'll need to spend a minimum of 30K for that and you can play almost every games

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