Ownaholic
New Member
Hey all,
I'm making a first time build, and I just want to double-check with you guys to see if the core components are absolutely compatible. I realize that basically all of the parts say "compatible with Intel Core i5!", or something similar, but nonetheless, I want your reassurance. =]
(I believe they are, but you can never be too sure as a newbie!)
The last thing I want is to blow all this cash and find out that something isn't compatible, something is getting bottlenecked, that there will be problems with the case, etc.
NOTE: Yes, I will be purchasing from both Newegg and Amazon for a myriad of reasons. (Primarily being that due to recent trade-ins, I now have a $400 gift card to Amazon)
Intel Core i5-2500K
Asus ASUS P8H67-M LX
Kingston HyperX 8GB - Model KHX1600C9D3X1K2/8GX
Rosewill Xtreme Series RX750-S-B 750W
COOLER MASTER Elite 430 RC-430-KWN1
ASUS ENGTX550 TI DC/DI/1GD5 GeForce GTX 550 Ti (Fermi) 1GB
I have yet to pick out the minor details such as hard drive, optical drive, etc.
But my main concern is this: Will the motherboard match the case?
I've been watching a lot of Newegg videos, and picked up the info that a common mistake of newbies such as myself, is that the pins on the motherboard don't match up to the pins of the case or something, thus ultimately risking a bunch of problems.
As for everything else, I know the mobo and CPU are of the same socket type, the graphics card ought to work flawlessly with it's Asus-counterpart Mobo, and the PSU should be plenty powerful.
On a side question, do you think that graphics card in conjunction with the rest of the build is powerful enough to run Crysis 2 on max settings? Realistically, I'm only going to be using this for WoW/TF2 max settings (I realize this is overkill for both games), but I do intend on playing Crysis 2, and would like to be able to play at, or near, max settings.
Thanks a million!
*edit*
I do intend to overclock the CPU and GPU just a bit. Not too much to the point that I need to buy after-market cooling fans just to keep it reasonably cool; but just enough OCing to get the job done.
I'm making a first time build, and I just want to double-check with you guys to see if the core components are absolutely compatible. I realize that basically all of the parts say "compatible with Intel Core i5!", or something similar, but nonetheless, I want your reassurance. =]
(I believe they are, but you can never be too sure as a newbie!)
The last thing I want is to blow all this cash and find out that something isn't compatible, something is getting bottlenecked, that there will be problems with the case, etc.
NOTE: Yes, I will be purchasing from both Newegg and Amazon for a myriad of reasons. (Primarily being that due to recent trade-ins, I now have a $400 gift card to Amazon)
Intel Core i5-2500K
Asus ASUS P8H67-M LX
Kingston HyperX 8GB - Model KHX1600C9D3X1K2/8GX
Rosewill Xtreme Series RX750-S-B 750W
COOLER MASTER Elite 430 RC-430-KWN1
ASUS ENGTX550 TI DC/DI/1GD5 GeForce GTX 550 Ti (Fermi) 1GB
I have yet to pick out the minor details such as hard drive, optical drive, etc.
But my main concern is this: Will the motherboard match the case?
I've been watching a lot of Newegg videos, and picked up the info that a common mistake of newbies such as myself, is that the pins on the motherboard don't match up to the pins of the case or something, thus ultimately risking a bunch of problems.
As for everything else, I know the mobo and CPU are of the same socket type, the graphics card ought to work flawlessly with it's Asus-counterpart Mobo, and the PSU should be plenty powerful.
On a side question, do you think that graphics card in conjunction with the rest of the build is powerful enough to run Crysis 2 on max settings? Realistically, I'm only going to be using this for WoW/TF2 max settings (I realize this is overkill for both games), but I do intend on playing Crysis 2, and would like to be able to play at, or near, max settings.
Thanks a million!
*edit*
I do intend to overclock the CPU and GPU just a bit. Not too much to the point that I need to buy after-market cooling fans just to keep it reasonably cool; but just enough OCing to get the job done.
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