Leonidas
AMD's Dogma: ARyzen (No Intel inside)
Lets face it, you will have a hard time buying the RTX 3000 series and RX 6000 series at this time as they are heavily supply constrained. Be patient, don't reward the scalpers, these components will eventually become in stock at their MSRP again. With that being said here are some builds in case you can buy a GPU at a reasonable price right now.
Builds will be updated when new products launch. For now all builds will have CPUs/GPUs at their MSRP as they are still some listings at that price (sold out).
CPUs
Recommended:
AMD Ryzen 5600X
Intel Core i5 11600K
Value:
AMD Ryzen 3600
Intel Core i5 11400F
Ryzen 3600 and Intel Core i5 11400 are both currently good values as they offer great performance at under $200. If you want to move up to top tier performance you'll need to go with an unlocked 10th or 11th-series Intel CPU (1xxxxK) or a Ryzen 5000X CPU. According to Techspot, there is a 1% difference on average between the 10900K and 5900X, and a 5% difference between 5600X and 5900X at 1080p, which shrinks at higher resolutions. Currently 6 strong cores (Intel Core 11400-11600K and AMD Ryzen 5600x) is enough for AAA gaming, however that will change some point in the future, how long? No one can say for sure... but since these PC CPUs have cores that are more powerful than what are in the current gen consoles, I don't think it will be an issue any time soon.
Go high core count only if you have things that can actually make use of them.
Ryzen 5000 w/ V Cache and Alder Lake will launch later this year, which could finally be a noticeable improvement in gaming compared to the incremental improvements we've seen in recent years.
GPUs
Recommended:
Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080
AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT
Value:
Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti
The latest GPUs from both Nvidia and AMD are impressive. Nvidia has a substantial lead in heavy ray tracing applications but AMD is very competitive when it comes to rasterization performance. Currently, Nvidia leads in the $400 tier with the RTX 3060 Ti which is a fantastic GPU with better than console raster and RT capabilities. At the higher end the RTX 3080 and RX 6800 XT offer similar rasterization performance with the 3080 coming ahead at 4K and the 6800 XT ahead at 1080p. But in games with heavy RT effects there is a massive advantage for Nvidia GeForce RTX even before DLSS is enabled. The RTX GPUs have the ability to use DLSS 2.0 in a handful of games which increases performance with graphics that are arguably on par with native rendering. AMD is currently working on a similar feature for their 6000 series GPUs that will become available at a later date. AMD GPUs have the ability to use Smart Access Memory a brand of Resizable BAR which is also available on Intel CPUs under a different name and also coming to Nvidia GPUs at a later date.
RAM
Recommended: 32 GB DDR4 3600 Mbps
Value: 16 GB DDR4 3200 Mbps
Some may argue 16 GB is enough but 32 GB gives you a lot more freedom in desktop usage and can improve your experience. Activate your memory profiles in BIOS in order to run them at their rated speeds.
SSDs
Recommended: PCIe 3.0x4 NVMe SSD
Value: SATA SSD
The sweet spot is still PCIe 3.0 in terms of price and gaming load time performance. It could be years before we see games taking advantage of PCIe 4.0 speeds.
TechSpot did a nice article where they tested drives in a number of games and found no difference between 3.0 and 4.0 drives at this point.
PSUs
Graphics cards require more power these days than they used to, make sure you have enough PSU power or you could see system instability.
Cases
Good airflow is a concern with some cases make sure you do your research before buying a case to see if it is easy to build in and has the features you want as they can last you through a number of builds.
GamePad
Recommended:
Xbox Series Controller
PS5 Dual Sense Controller
Xbox Series controller is fantastic on PC if you play console style games. The Dual Sense is also a fantastic game pad and Steam has Dual Sense integration. Xbox Series controller is cheaper but Dual Sense can be worth it especially if more games take advantage of it's capabilities on PC.
AI Upscaling
Spatial Image Enhancement
Ray Tracing
Programs for Setup & Overclocking
CPU-Z: Information on your CPU, motherboard and memory
GPU-Z: Information on your GPU and VRAM
MSI Afterburner: overclocking utility for GPUs, works on any modern GPU from any vendor
HWiNFO64: detailed system information
CPU Benchmarks
CinebenchR20
Blender
GPU Benchmarks
Unigine Heaven
3DMark
Pricing & Compatibility
PCPartPicker: Good way to see if all your components are compatible and compare prices between components aggregated from various websites.
Youtube
Gamers Nexus
Digital Foundry
Websites
Anandtech
Techpowerup
Techspot
SIGGRAPH: August 9-13
MOD NOTE by DGrayson - Just another thanks to Leonidas for this awesome thread. But note this is not a "static" thread. As Leonidas indicated there will be announcements soon that can cause us to update and change our recommendations. But my main point is that if anyone wants to contribute please let us know. For example I can see room for more detailed explanations on recommended Monitors, Cases, Motherboards, PSUs etc, even Mouses, Keyboards. The list is endless really. So please reach out if anyone wants to tackle any of this or if you have any other suggestions just let us know!
Last edited: