Opinions on my part list?

The VCR King

Well-Known Member
Ok this should suit my needs right? Literally all I do is fallout 4, TF2 and Netflix

https://pcpartpicker.com/list/sVxkYr

It should be a bit better than my current rig in performance terms. I don't need "balls to the wall" performance I just need something that'll run decent lol. Later I'll switch the black for the blue drive
 

The VCR King

Well-Known Member
Don't be stupid and buy a proper size board.

That's as nice as I'll word it.
I understand but as I said before there weren't any micro atx boards with built-in wifi. If I can save the costs of a wifi card by getting a micro itx board WITH built in then shouldn't I?
 

Intel_man

VIP Member
I understand but as I said before there weren't any micro atx boards with built-in wifi. If I can save the costs of a wifi card by getting a micro itx board WITH built in then shouldn't I?
Because you lose a bunch of pcie slots over ATX, 2 dimm slots, and possibly sata ports among other things.

Just buy a mid tower ATX. mATX cases aren't that much smaller than mid towers. You're not going to save much space.

You either go full mITX or you get ATX. mATX sucks.
 

johnb35

Administrator
Staff member
I would also go with at least a 500 or 550 watt psu, will help if you upgrade video card later.
 

beers

Moderator
Staff member
I'd only go mini ITX if I had a super small mITX case to put it in. Otherwise as Intel was indicating that a lot of mid tower ATX that accept a full size board are pretty compact (such as the Fractal Define C, which is only about 8% larger than the one you listed :cool: ) and offer you a lot more expandability for not much extra tower height. Ultimately you get a more complete computer without both limiting yourself and paying a premium price for mITX components.

Obviously your call, however.
 

The VCR King

Well-Known Member
I'd only go mini ITX if I had a super small mITX case to put it in. Otherwise as Intel was indicating that a lot of mid tower ATX that accept a full size board are pretty compact (such as the Fractal Define C, which is only about 8% larger than the one you listed :cool: ) and offer you a lot more expandability for not much extra tower height. Ultimately you get a more complete computer without both limiting yourself and paying a premium price for mITX components.

Obviously your call, however.
I'll still tinker around a bit with the PCPP.

In the meantime, how would the performance of my current list PC compare to my current rig?
 

The VCR King

Well-Known Member
I tweaked the microatx list a bit more, and so far here is what I've come up with:
https://pcpartpicker.com/user/CrazyCalvinWilliams/saved/P6D2RB

Besides the whole "mini-ITX in a micro-ATX" case thing, wouldn't this be a pretty decent build performance-wise if it became a "reality"?

I mean, as long as it performs equally or better than my current PC I'll be happy.

I'm just wanting to do a new build since I have the funds and the Beast is on borrowed time.
 

The VCR King

Well-Known Member
I took the time and did a LOT of research on compatibility and speeds and all that stuff and I think I finally got a decent build list:
https://pcpartpicker.com/user/CrazyCalvinWilliams/saved/P6D2RB

Additional notes about this revision, I chose the 3GB 1060 card because I don't play any games where 6gb would do me any good, heck I rarely play Fo4 now and I barely use all of the 2GB on my 6950 playing TF2.

Also I chose a non modular PSU to save money because I'm not bothering with a modular unit if my case has no side window.
 

Intel_man

VIP Member
I chose the 3GB 1060 card because I don't play any games where 6gb would do me any good, heck I rarely play Fo4 now and I barely use all of the 2GB on my 6950 playing TF2.
That's not the reason why the 6gb version of the 1060 is recommended. Vram consumption also does not give you a good picture of performance demand.

The 6gb version physically has more CUDA cores which means it's a faster card in general, even when vram usage is not being fully consumed.

On top of all that, I'd get a 2x8gb configuration instead of a 4x4gb layout. There's really no reason to occupy all four slots at such low density ram.
 

The VCR King

Well-Known Member
That's not the reason why the 6gb version of the 1060 is recommended. Vram consumption also does not give you a good picture of performance demand.

The 6gb version physically has more CUDA cores which means it's a faster card in general, even when vram usage is not being fully consumed.

On top of all that, I'd get a 2x8gb configuration instead of a 4x4gb layout. There's really no reason to occupy all four slots at such low density ram.
1. I understand but I almost exclusively play TF2 and Need for Speed, I don't really need "balls to the wall" performance GPU-wise. As I said before my little Radeon 6950 2GB is already more than enough so a 1060 3GB will fit me fine.

2. I prefer 4x4 so I can run dual-channel. Plus the cost difference is pretty much negligible.
 
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