Banjo Robertson
Random Gunz The-Office
789
|
Posted - 2016.02.04 13:13:00 -
[1] - Quote
Breakin Stuff wrote:shanatak wrote:I m disappointed there ll not a port to ps4 but I cannot leave my pythons . So maybe I ll buy a computer but I really know nothing about this engine, So what kind of PC should I buy to continue dust in the future? Find out what the tech specs will be before you burn 3000 bucks or something silly
With the technology available today, $3000 would get you a pc that is really really really really good, it would be good for a very long time, and you'd probably have no regrets. |
Banjo Robertson
Random Gunz The-Office
790
|
Posted - 2016.02.04 15:09:00 -
[2] - Quote
We dont know the specs of the game, but a nice PC that I would build today from scratch is this:
Intel Core i5-6500, 3.2GHz LGA 1151 - Around $200 depending on sales/offers from where you get it. GeForce GTX 960 GPU, there's either 2GB or 4GB versions, either is fine, not much difference in price, between $180 and $220 ish depending on where you get it and promotional offers Sandisk SSD 240GB - About $66 Western Digital Blue 1TB Hard drive - About $54 16GB of DDR4 SDRAM - About $90, could vary based on deals, depending on motherboard you could either do 2x8 GB or 4x4GB
The motherboard and power supply would depend on how big of a PC case you want to get, after years of moving from apartment to apartment I'm tired of the standard large PC cases so I switched to the m-ITX format and love it for the portability.
So looking at about $610 before you buy the case, power supply, and motherboard, looking at maybe another $150 to get the rest. This PC would be great for all current games, and future proof for atleast 5 years, in my opinion. If the next generation of GPUs turn out to be much much better, you could keep everything else and buy a new GPU later on, everything else in this PC will be very good for atleast 10 years unless a part breaks. I dont see CPUs getting any major 'performance' boosts, usually just power and size effeciency gains in the following years to come.
Install the operating system and your main programs/games onto the SSD for super fast loading times, then the 1TB hard drive is good for secondary games and programs and other media you want to keep that you dont really care whether they load/write fast or not. |