Building a new PC around the £1K margin

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I have been out of the PC building business for years now since having my laptop (MSI GT73VR 6RE Titan) for the past 6 or so years.
I am now looking at building a new desktop but I am so out of the know with the new components.
I will be gaming at 1080p so nothing crazy is really needed and will be playing modern AAA titles.

https://uk.************.com/list/qrHTwg - This is what I have currently put together on Part Picker to get an idea, any advice or suggestions would be appreciated.

CPU - AMD Ryzen 7 5800X 3.8 GHz 8-Core Processor = £179.99
CPU Cooler - Cooler Master MASTERLIQUID ML240L RGB V2 65.59 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler = £69.98
Motherboard - MSI MAG B550 TOMAHAWK ATX AM4 Motherboard = £129.97
Memory - Corsair Vengeance LPX 16 GB (2 x 8 GB) DDR4-3200 CL16 Memory ( x 2) = £68
Storage - Samsung 970 Evo Plus 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 3.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive = £42.86
Seagate Barracuda Compute 2 TB 3.5" 7200 RPM Internal Hard Drive = £42.99
GPU - MSI MECH 2X OC Radeon RX 6650 XT 8 GB Video Card = £235
Case - Corsair 4000D Airflow ATX Mid Tower Case = £79
Power Supply - Corsair SF750 750 W 80+ Platinum Certified Fully Modular SFX Power Supply = £154.99

Total = £1002.76


Thanks,
Tom
 
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£150 (incl. VAT)
£110 (incl. VAT)
FREE DELIVERY
£93 (incl. VAT)
£85 (incl. VAT)
£83 (incl. VAT)
£76 (incl. VAT)
Last edited:
£150 (incl. VAT)
£110 (incl. VAT)
FREE DELIVERY
£93 (incl. VAT)
£85 (incl. VAT)
£83 (incl. VAT)
£76 (incl. VAT)
£150 (incl. VAT)
£110 (incl. VAT)
FREE DELIVERY
£93 (incl. VAT)
£85 (incl. VAT)
£83 (incl. VAT)
£76 (incl. VAT)
This is a good list.

Personally if your going for 3tb storage I'd change the 2x1tb SSDs to. 1x 2tb and 1x 1tb and have 2 NVME drives. Will work out roughly the same price.
Thankyou for the suggestion Kieran, I have had a look at swapping those SSD's out and the 2TB NVME Drives seem a lot more expensive than the other setup.
 
There is no reason for the SFX PSU and I did not notice that, what is a SFX PSU?

They're intended for small cases, usually ITX cases.

SFX PSUs can fit in cases that require ATX PSUs (Corsair include a bracket), but the reverse is not possible, since SFX PSUs are more compact than ATX.

Due to their compact design, SFXs tend to run a little hotter and noisier than ATX PSUs and are often overbuilt to give them more headroom, but you'd need to read the reviews to find out more.
 
They're intended for small cases, usually ITX cases.

SFX PSUs can fit in cases that require ATX PSUs (Corsair include a bracket), but the reverse is not possible, since SFX PSUs are more compact than ATX.

Due to their compact design, SFXs tend to run a little hotter and noisier than ATX PSUs and are often overbuilt to give them more headroom, but you'd need to read the reviews to find out more.
Ah okay that makes sense, I will avoid that PSU now then. Thankyou for the heads up.
 
Personally, I'd extend that budget if you can to get a 5800X3D. The bios for that Gigabyte motherboard will need updated to support it. This could make your new build last a while longer.
 
Also I will be needing a Wifi card as I cannot setup a wired connection currently and found a Motherboard that has it setup already and seems to be more cost effective.

ASUS ROG STRIX B550-F GAMING WIFI II - Motherboard = £ 155​

Not sure if anyone has any experience with this one.
 
Don't buy an 5800X3D if you're buying an entirely new system, it's a great upgrade for people currently on AM4 but if you're spending that sort of money for totally new you might as well go AM5.

My basket at OcUK:

Total: £1,059.83 (includes delivery: £11.98)​


This will net you more longevity than buying into AM4, it's the current (new) socket and it has years of upgrades ahead of it.​
You should be able to pop in a 8000 or 9000 series X3D CPU in a few years without a problem.​
 
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Don't buy an 5800X3D if you're buying an entirely new system, it's a great upgrade for people currently on AM4 but if you're spending that sort of money for totally new you might as well go AM5.

My basket at OcUK:

Total: £1,059.83 (includes delivery: £11.98)​

This will net you more longevity than buying into AM4, it's the current (new) socket and it has years of upgrades ahead of it.​
You should be able to pop in a 8000 or 9000 series X3D CPU in a few years without a problem.​
That makes sense, buying into longevity seems like a good plan. I like this setup, only thing I am unsure of is the motherboard as its a Micro-ATX but dont know if this would make a big difference. Going to have a look at what is about.
Already looked up and seen that the 7600 has around 30% higher performance than the 5600.
 
That makes sense, buying into longevity seems like a good plan. I like this setup, only thing I am unsure of is the motherboard as its a Micro-ATX but dont know if this would make a big difference. Going to have a look at what is about.
Already looked up and seen that the 7600 has around 30% higher performance than the 5600.

M-ATX is a smaller form factor and would fit in the suggested (M-ATX) case.

It is preference, but it was also the cheapest AM5 motherboard on OCUK with Wi-Fi which is why I specced around it. You don't get as many expansion slots etc on the board itself but it doesn't really effect performance or anything.
 
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Thankyou for the suggestion Kieran, I have had a look at swapping those SSD's out and the 2TB NVME Drives seem a lot more expensive than the other setup.

Going buy the origional list though he has 2x 1tb NVME drives plus 1tb SSD

43.99 + 43.99 (2x 1tb NVME) + 1tb SSD 69.94 = 157.22 total
1x 2tb NVME = 92.99 + 1x 1tb NVME 43.99 = 136.8

It's actually cheaper to go full NVME
 

Enjoy your set up good choice, don't forget you will get 2x Starfield codes so you can sell one and make some money back that way. Just make sure to claim both!
 
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