Got a new Rig

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  1. Posts : 570
    Windows 7 Home Premium x64
       #1

    Got a new Rig


    Amazon.com: Avatar Gaming PC FX8365, AMD FX8350 Processor, 16GB DDR3 Memory, 1TB HDD, Windows 8: Computers & Accessories

    What, if any, should be first on my list to upgrade? I was looking into a few different cooling options, such as water cooling, maybe adding an extra fan or 2.
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  3. Posts : 570
    Windows 7 Home Premium x64
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Jesus dude! I'm not trying to run Battlefield 4 on Ultra lol. The only thing I'd be playing MAYBE is WoW with a friend occasionally, definitely Minecraft
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  4. Posts : 13,576
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #4

    LOL Ya

    But definitely an ssd with Windows 7.
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  5. Posts : 109
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64Bit (Service Pack 1)
       #5

    Definately agree with AddRAM. An SSD is always a worthwhile upgrade, and a dedicated GPU will always come in handy, any idea on a budget?

    Edit: Just seen that is already comes with a MSI Geforce GTX650 1Gb. So all thats i would recommend would be an SSD
    Last edited by Apprentrice5; 24 Oct 2013 at 08:32.
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  6. Posts : 9,600
    Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
       #6

    X3 on an SSD. You will be blown away by the decrease in boot time and program opening time. some programs will also have increased data access speed. Adding a good SSD will give you the best improvement for your money.
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  7. Posts : 1,045
    Win8/8.1,Win7-U64, Vista U64, uncounted Linux distor's
       #7

    I would pass on the SSD as the first upgrade. While it well certainly decrease boot time, program startup time, it well do very little to improve the game playing experience.

    Your box has Nvidia GT650 embedded graphics, not exactly a barn burner. Install a good stand alone GPU, you well see a major improvement in FPS and a much more enjoyable game play.

    The system drive is 1% of the overall experience, the GPU is 90%.
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  8. Posts : 177
    windows 7 home premium
       #8

    madcratebuilder said:
    I would pass on the SSD as the first upgrade. While it well certainly decrease boot time, program startup time, it well do very little to improve the game playing experience.

    Your box has Nvidia GT650 embedded graphics, not exactly a barn burner. Install a good stand alone GPU, you well see a major improvement in FPS and a much more enjoyable game play.

    The system drive is 1% of the overall experience, the GPU is 90%.
    This is true but he stated he would mainly only play WOW and wow can be played on ancient systems I used to run it just fine on an old laptop with dedicated graphics that was like 6 years old ^^ blizzard optimize WOW to work on everything and leaves us who want insane graphics in the dark ha-ha.
    In my opinion windows 7 since 8 is well just.....hides in a corner. and an ssd I brought one after recommendations on here and at first I thought eh seems not worth it for a few seconds of boot time and a few faster file load times but it really was an great upgrade
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  9. Posts : 11,424
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64
       #9

    Well with everything said so far I would say don't do a thing and just use it, you have a great rig as it sits for your needs. If it was me I would :
    1) Aftermarket quality air or sealed water cooling
    2) Go with a 128gb SSD
    3) Dedicated GPU card
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  10. Posts : 2,973
    Windows 7 Professional 64bit SP1
       #10

    madcratebuilder said:
    I would pass on the SSD as the first upgrade. While it well certainly decrease boot time, program startup time, it well do very little to improve the game playing experience.

    Your box has Nvidia GT650 embedded graphics, not exactly a barn burner. Install a good stand alone GPU, you well see a major improvement in FPS and a much more enjoyable game play.

    The system drive is 1% of the overall experience, the GPU is 90%.
    If you didn't catch what he said, I'll reiterate: He will play WoW occasionally, which is mainly CPU dependent, and definitely Minecraft. He should try out the graphics that come with it first to see if it does what he wants and if it needs to be upgraded.

    The system drive is 1% of the overall experience..........I don't quite understand this. If you mean gaming experience, then yes it doesn't make that much difference. When he's not playing games, the system drive is 99.9% of the overall experience. An SSD will make every aspect of normal computer use faster.....boot/reboot times, program startup time, file access time, file transferring times....almost anything you can think of. The reason is simple, the storage component of a computer is THE slowest piece of the puzzle. It is slower than current CPU, GPU, and RAM speeds.....by quite a bit. An SSD is exponentially faster than a mechanical hard drive and closes the gap between the other components and the storage device, hence why it is the biggest improvement short of building a totally new system.
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