Help out an old timer...!

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31 Oct 2012
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290
Hi all,

Firstly, I'm actually not that old, I'm 29 (and a half). Back when I was a teenager I did nothing but build PCs. I remember my huge Lian Li PC-70 case with its 3 120mm fans, neon LEDs, an AMD processor of some sort...

All has changed now.

I grew tired of tinkering around with my PC just to get those extra few 3D Marks. I was spending more time benchmarking than actually using the thing, it was big, cumbersome and made a racket. So you know what I did? I swapped it for a laptop, and a few years later bought an Xbox 360 to satisfy any gaming needs I had. It worked well, to a degree.

I'm a contractor. Which means I don't have much time to play games and mess about with things. I work whenever I can. I still keep on top of games reviews etc and decided to get myself a copy of Skyrim for the Xbox. What a great game! I've played it for a few hours and thoroughly enjoy it. That was until I saw it running on a colleague's PC... Holy :eek: !!

This got me thinking (which is kinda dangerous). I'd love to go back to PC gaming and play beautiful games like Skyrim for an hour or so a week. I could just go and buy a PC, or put one together. That'd be fine except I don't have the space for a dedicated PC. What I'm after is some sort of compacted solution. Same capabilities, just smaller. Is this even possible I'm asking myself, it's been so long since I've put hardware like this together. I'm aware that there are going to be issues with cooling, and perhaps noise. I need to strike a balance of power, and convenience. I can't be watching a blu-ray with fans audible in the background.

So I'm on a quest. A quest to build a small, sleek, relatively quiet gaming PC, capable of running the latest games at decent quality. In doing this I would use the PC for other things too, Blu-Rays, media streaming, web browsing etc. An all singing, all dancing box of magic :p

I've spotted some components I think I'd like to include but I'm not sure if they're going to fit in the case I'd like. Perhaps you guys could lend a hand in identifying some bits and pieces for me? :D

For the case, I was thinking a Silverstone. Not sure what one yet but something slick and black. I'm planning on having the PC rest under the TV on a glass shelf so it can't be too 'boxy' or cube-like.

I'm going Intel with this one, an I7 3570k perhaps? What it's going to sit on I have no clue. I think I need a Mini-ITX motherboard, any suggestions?

8GB of Corsair memory or equivalent. RAM seems pretty cheap these days!! If 16GB is more feasible for the long term then happy to do that.

Graphics.... well.... back to Skyrim. I'd love to play this game on Ultra, with everything maxed out. I want it looking beautiful. I realise there are cards out there that will do that no problem, like the Radeon HD7900 series or an Nvidia GTX680/685/690 but I'm not sure if:

a) these cards will fit and,
b) I'll have the power available given the case I'm using.

I'd like to future-proof for at least a year or so. I realise things move so quickly so again, I need to strike a balance with value for money in mind.

A solid state drive is a must I think. I'd only be loading the OS and Skyrim on it for a start. Space is going to be at a premium.

That's about as far as I've got. I'm in desperate need of some assistance as you can see. I'm going to have fun whilst I do this though, that's for sure. If someone tells me that it's not even possible and i have to make some sacrifices then so be it. I'm just grateful for any advice you can give an out of touch enthusiast.

Thanks for reading guys

David
 
I realise I didn't mention anything about a budget. There isn't one as such but I'm not going crazy on it. I'm thinking around the £800 mark, give or take £100 maybe.

:)
 
Nice looking case but you stuggle with a gaming rig in there. It only accepts low profile expansion cards, Gpu's. None of those that come in LP will come near running Skyrim on Ultra. Lian Li do some simular looking cases with full expansion slots.

The prodigy is a popular Mini ITX case.

Thanks for the advice.

I had a feeling the case wouldn't fit certain components. I don't mind the BitFenex prodigy case but it's not really going to fit.

I'm off to scour the internet :)

Keep the suggestions coming please!

Thanks again.
 
bit over budget but I could trim it down a bit :)

Mobo has built in wireless, I don't like the adapters much as their ugly! but can always change that about!

Some of the stuff is on This Week Only

The PSU is on Today only.

Don't know if you wanted extra storage on top of your SSD but I included it anyway!

YOUR BASKET
1 x Intel Core i7-3770 3.40GHz (Ivybridge) Socket LGA1155 Processor (77W) - Retail £239.99
1 x Gigabyte ATI Radeon HD 7870 OC Windforce 3X 2048MB GDDR5 PCI-Express Graphics Card w/ FARCRY3, Nexuiz & Sleeping Dogs PC Games £191.99
1 x ASRock Z77E-ITX Intel Z77 (Socket 1155) DDR3 Mini ITX Motherboard £119.99
1 x Samsung 128GB SSD 830 Series SATA 6Gb/s Solid State Drive - (MZ-7PC128B/WW) £89.99
1 x Silverstone Grandia GD05 Desktop HTPC Case - Black (SST-GD05B USB3.0) £74.99
1 x XFX Pro Series 650W XXX Edition Modular '80 Plus Bronze' Power Supply £65.99
1 x Toshiba (7K1000.D) 1TB SATA 6GB/s 32MB Cache - OEM (DT01ACA100) £64.99
1 x Avexir MPower Series 8GB (2x4GB) DDR3 PC3-12800C9 1600MHz Dual Channel Kit (AVD3U16000904G-2CM) £35.99
Total : £898.01 (includes shipping : £11.75).



I've got no experience with the case at all.. if it was my build i'd go with the Prodigy, but I'm bias as I own one! ;)

They are beautiful cases and it looks awesome sitting next to my TV cabinet.
 
My build is in the BitFenix Prodigy. Using an i3, stock cooler and a Corsair modular PSU (i'll check which one shortly)

added x2 BitFenix fans to the case...

I don't actually notice its on, I have to check to make sure ^^

EDIT: I've got the stock cooler on my main Sandybridge i7 system, runs fine!

EDIT2: heres the PSU I used, got it in the sale a few weeks ago: https://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=CA-052-CS
and I've got these fans: https://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=FG-012-BX

The fans match the ones already inside the Prodigy (I'm funny with things matching) :P
 
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Stock cooler is not the quietest ones around, especially if you overclock. However you would have to then look for a CLC to fit in the cases. and thats if they can support any form of proper cooling at all! I too would reccomend the Prodigy but if you havent got the space for it ;)

Also any reason for the i7? The only advantage it has over the i5 is Hyperthreading which only a limited number of apps and no games take advantage of.
 
Stock cooler is not the quietest ones around, especially if you overclock. However you would have to then look for a CLC to fit in the cases. and thats if they can support any form of proper cooling at all! I too would reccomend the Prodigy but if you havent got the space for it ;)

Also any reason for the i7? The only advantage it has over the i5 is Hyperthreading which only a limited number of apps and no games take advantage of.

Indeed, I'd probably go with an i5 - you could then spend the extra money on a couple of fans or replace the stock cooler? ... better GPU? or the OS if you need one!

Theres a great Thread on here from Buzzlightweight - he did an awesome BitFenix Prodigy build... Its a lot to take in but its certainly a good read... http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=18413835
 
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