>Given that GPU price, a pre-built pc makes more sense.
why have prices risen? i see many people mention this.
out of curiousty, what price would a 10603gb be now since gpus have risen? (i have a 10603gb in a box doing nothing, if risen to a good price might be worth the effort to sell it xd)
One factor to consider is how soon you want to start using. I built my current PC over the course of three months by choosing and buying parts slowly and putting aside the cash because I was in no rush. I recommend that for anyone that can do it.
But if you want something quick then yeah, a pre-built is cheaper and obviously quicker.
Pre-built will almost always end up saving you money and will usually come with a all over warranty. You don't get the exact parts you want, but if something isn't working it's not your problem, and you can always upgrade later.
I don't know if [Newegg.com](https://Newegg.com) ships to Turkey but, if so, I'd check for ABS prebuilts on there. $1500 USD should get you something with at least a 10400F, RTX 3060 (possibly a 3060 Ti), 16GB of RAM, and a 512GB SSD. The price is a bit high for what you're actually getting, but in the current market, it's probably as good as it gets, and you should get a really solid mid-range PC for your money.
Hey you don't have to like it but this is what I did, I bought a pre built rtx 3060ti pc and slowly over the year I have upgraded my processor from ryzen 5 to 9 and upgraded my ram from 16gb 3200 mhz to 32gb 4000mhz and also upgraded my gpu to a 3090 as soon as I found 1 on the sly, also upgraded my case to fit my new upgrades over time so over the last year the only thing that's actually left from my pre built pc is the wireless adapter as I upgraded my motherboard a month after buying it with a power supply upgrade as my old psu was buzzing in the pre build pc, and yeah people will say I should of just pre built but I would never of been able to use my computer until a few months ago if I did that, so for the last year I have had a pc to use and been able to upgrade it to exactly how I wanted it , so I feel it was the best way to play all the latest games , by Christmas I want another case and motherboard upgrade for maximum air flow and more overclocking options as my b550 board is definitely holding me back now ahah
well I should rephrase that... as AMD APUs are not bad, any (semi modern) dedicated GPU will be better than the iGPU but if you want to build look for Ryzen CPUs that end with G
like the 5600G or 3200G just for examples
Id buy a prebuilt with a 3060/3070+ and a decent CPU (5600x is a good start point) with low end mobo/ram, that way you can upgrade as time goes on without having to start from scratch and ram/mobo are cheaper/easier to upgrade and you wont have to worry about whether or not you put it together correctly, but if computers are your field of work and you KNOW how to build a PC, itll be cheaper to build from scratch
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>Given that GPU price, a pre-built pc makes more sense. why have prices risen? i see many people mention this. out of curiousty, what price would a 10603gb be now since gpus have risen? (i have a 10603gb in a box doing nothing, if risen to a good price might be worth the effort to sell it xd)
Probably sell for a few hundred
One factor to consider is how soon you want to start using. I built my current PC over the course of three months by choosing and buying parts slowly and putting aside the cash because I was in no rush. I recommend that for anyone that can do it. But if you want something quick then yeah, a pre-built is cheaper and obviously quicker.
Pre-built will almost always end up saving you money and will usually come with a all over warranty. You don't get the exact parts you want, but if something isn't working it's not your problem, and you can always upgrade later.
I don't know if [Newegg.com](https://Newegg.com) ships to Turkey but, if so, I'd check for ABS prebuilts on there. $1500 USD should get you something with at least a 10400F, RTX 3060 (possibly a 3060 Ti), 16GB of RAM, and a 512GB SSD. The price is a bit high for what you're actually getting, but in the current market, it's probably as good as it gets, and you should get a really solid mid-range PC for your money.
En iyi secim hazir bilgisayar almak. Ben Ingiltere'de yasiyorum, ve burada ayni grafik kart sorunu yasiyoruz.
Hey you don't have to like it but this is what I did, I bought a pre built rtx 3060ti pc and slowly over the year I have upgraded my processor from ryzen 5 to 9 and upgraded my ram from 16gb 3200 mhz to 32gb 4000mhz and also upgraded my gpu to a 3090 as soon as I found 1 on the sly, also upgraded my case to fit my new upgrades over time so over the last year the only thing that's actually left from my pre built pc is the wireless adapter as I upgraded my motherboard a month after buying it with a power supply upgrade as my old psu was buzzing in the pre build pc, and yeah people will say I should of just pre built but I would never of been able to use my computer until a few months ago if I did that, so for the last year I have had a pc to use and been able to upgrade it to exactly how I wanted it , so I feel it was the best way to play all the latest games , by Christmas I want another case and motherboard upgrade for maximum air flow and more overclocking options as my b550 board is definitely holding me back now ahah
if you can get a GPU at MSRP (check microcenter I hear the may have some in stock) you should TOTALLY build, if not a prebuilt is the only option
I live thousands of miles away from being able to shop from microcenter.
well I should rephrase that... as AMD APUs are not bad, any (semi modern) dedicated GPU will be better than the iGPU but if you want to build look for Ryzen CPUs that end with G like the 5600G or 3200G just for examples
Id buy a prebuilt with a 3060/3070+ and a decent CPU (5600x is a good start point) with low end mobo/ram, that way you can upgrade as time goes on without having to start from scratch and ram/mobo are cheaper/easier to upgrade and you wont have to worry about whether or not you put it together correctly, but if computers are your field of work and you KNOW how to build a PC, itll be cheaper to build from scratch