Hi sorry, Could have your advice on this one, i forgot I added this one, If i'm patient I will be able to up the budget, as I had no idea what I was added I had copied a build from a pc builder site.
My basket at Overclockers UK:
- 1 x Asus Prime X570-P (AMD AM4) DDR4 X570 Chipset ATX Motherboard= £179.99
- 1 x Corsair Vengeance LPX 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 PC4-24000C15 3000MHz Dual Channel Kit - Black (CMK32GX4M2B3= £139.99
- 1 x Patriot Viper VPN100 M.2 2280 PCIe 256GB SSD (VPN100-256GM28H)= £55.99
- 1 x Raijintek Eos RGB Rainbow Complete Water Cooling - 240mm= £53.99
- 1 x Corsair TX750M 750W 80 Plus Gold Semi Modular Power Supply (CP-9020131-UK)= £114.95
- 1 x Microsoft Windows 10 64-Bit DVD - OEM (MS-KW9-00139)= £109.99
- 1 x AMD Ryzen 7 3700X Eight Core 4.4GHz (Socket AM4) Processor - Retail= £299.99
- 1 x MSI GeForce RTX 2070 Super Ventus OC 8192MB PCI-Express Graphics Card= £559.99
- 1 x Seagate 2TB Barracuda 5400RPM 2.5" Internal Hard Drive - PC and PS4 (ST2000LM015)= £79.99
- 1 x ASUS PCE-AC88 Dual-Band Wireless AC3100 PCI-E Adapter= £79.99
- 1 x Aerocool Shard RGB Midi-Tower Case - Black Window= £29.99
Is this worth the extra?
Get 3200MHz C16 32GB RAM.
Increase the NVME M.2 SSD to 500GB at least.
Ditch Raijintek liquid cooling, they have an awful track record.
You're overpaying for Corsair TX. It's one of their mid-range PSUs, there are several better PSUs at lower price and with more warranty. 650W is more than plenty by the way.
You can save money on Windows if you buy a cheap key. You can download Windows from Microsoft's website, onto 8GB minimum USB flash drive and install from there.
You're overspending on the hard drive because it's a 2.5" model. There are cheaper 3.5" models which will fit in the case.
Onboard wifi speeds v separate adapter speeds depends on the actual hardware. Some onboard is faster than some adapters, and vice versa. You can find Gigabyte GC-WB1733D-I PCIe expansion card for £25 with max speed of 1733 Mbps. That Asus will only give you 400 Mbps extra (2100 Mbps) but at three times the cost. I would suggest the Gigabyte card or a motherboard with good onboard, would be plenty for your needs.
5700 XT is only a handful of fps away from 2070 Super, in general. And more value for money.
My basket at Overclockers UK:
- 1 x Alpenfohn Brocken ECO Advanced CPU Cooler - 120 mm= £29.99
- 1 x Toshiba Kioxia RC500 Pro 500GB M.2 2280 PCI-e 3.0 x4 NVMe Solid State Drive= £64.99
- 1 x Patriot Viper Steel 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 PC4-25600C16 3200MHz Dual Channel Kit (PVS432G320C6K)= £149.99
- 1 x Aerocool Shard RGB Midi-Tower Case - Black Window= £29.99
- 1 x AMD Ryzen 7 3700X Eight Core 4.4GHz (Socket AM4) Processor - Retail= £299.99
- 1 x Gigabyte X570 GAMING X (AMD AM4) DDR4 X570 Chipset ATX Motherboard= £169.99
- 1 x Phanteks AMP 650W 80 Plus Gold Modular Power Supply= £96.95
- 1 x Seagate 2TB Barracuda 7200RPM 256MB Cache Internal Hard Drive (ST2000DM008)= £56.99
- 1 x Powercolor Radeon RX 5700 XT Red Devil 8GB GDDR6 PCI-Express Graphics Card= £399.95
+ Gigabyte GC-WB1733D-I PCIe expansion card
+ cheap Windows 10 Pro key
£400 cheaper - larger SSD, better PSU, better RAM. About same graphics performance. I picked out a cooler that's plenty for 3700X and at 149mm it fits inside the case you chose. Be careful with cooler clearance for that case if you change cooler as it's only 155mm max cooler height. Personally I'd change the case to one with slightly more clearance and better airflow.
If you wanted Nvidia 2070 Super anyway, I'd go with:
My basket at Overclockers UK:
- 1 x Zotac GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER 8192MB GDDR6 PCI-Express Graphics Card= £499.99
- 1 x Gigabyte GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER Gaming OC 3X 8192MB GDDR6 PCI-Express Graphics Card= £529.99
Zotac 5 years warranty if you register. And that Gigabyte 4 years if you register.