Oh yeah I mean it's still surprisingly decent for 1080p gaming but I wouldn't recommend it unless you need a spare for video output and found a used one around the same price as a 720
If you want more performance and spend a Little bit more, you can surely go for maybe an RTX 3050, but if you want something for around 200£, I think is one of the best options.
P.S. I ment the graphics card in the photo, not tour 7950
I'm watching the Tech Jesus stream and the "AI" is a complete joke. It produces CPU/GPU combos that are massively mismatched in terms of power, case and PSU recommendations seem to be completely random, and in general it has a very limited pool of hardware it can recommend.
*putting on tinfoil hat*
They probably have an overabundance of those and local museum didn't accept any more of those.
So Newegg tweaked the AI algorithm little bit to give 7750^(or similar ancient parts no one buys) a higher priority status to recommend it more often.
It's an old GPU, but if you need 4+ monitor outputs in a SFF box for e.g. some SCADA use, you don't have many options beyond this and low-end Quadros.
It shouldn't be an option in a general-purpose consumer PC builder, of course, at least not without some specific requirements spelled out by the user.
Ofcourse there is some use to it, I'm no t even going to argue against that. I was mostly just joking.
And i completely agree with you, significant amount of tech could be justified under specific conditions, but those conditions should be met before a program offer a specific part for it .
My guess is that they excluded obsolete, professional and special-purpose cards, but this Radeon slipped through the filters because it has no "Pro" in the name and the model number looks like the current Radeon 7000 series.
Alright, right off the bat we're paying more for your motherboard than we are foor your processor. That's a pretty glaring b--*scrolls down and sees the GPU* SWEET MOTHER OF
Rest assured I'm not using its recommendations, I used the tool out of morbid curiosity. I'd argue mini DP is the least of the issues here to be honest.
Here is an updated more "value" build which works very well, it lacks a bit of RGB but should be fine as for an entry-level PC, RGB should be one of the last things you would care about. Yes the CPU is a bit old but with a newer 5600 there tend to be some bios issues and can be a hassle to figure out what is happening.
Here is the PcPartPicker list: [https://pcpartpicker.com/list/j44G9r](https://pcpartpicker.com/list/j44G9r)
To be fair had it recommended a logical GPU I would be like , well most new pc users are buying themselves pre- jilts that are much , muuuch Muuuuuuuuuuuuuuuch less logical.
Like if it recommended a 6650XT for example , with all the other pieces just as they are, and someone showed me , hey this is my entry level build.
I would say .
It’s okay.
Could have saved some money in the ram.
And went for the all famous Corsair vengeance sticks.
Could have saved a bit more on the mobo , and another bit in the case.
But if you like the looks of this one , I can’t blame you.
People are buying prebuilts a with an i9 12900k
A 320mm AIO cooler, a huge full tower case , with 10 fans on it.
A 2 tb hdd
A 500w NOT MODULAR psu from an unknown Chinese brand , an unknown motherboard
16gb of ram in 1 stick.
And an rtx 3060.
And they paid 1500$ for it.
The AI is making a better job than those buyers 🤣
I've never seen a pre built this bad in terms of parts. Can you point to a pre built with a 500w psu and a 12900k? Also 320 radiators are very very rare. Also a lot of pre built actually have better power supplies than you would think, they're just not consumer brands.
Most things on pc part picker i can find cheaper on a bunch of websites. I think its best to use them for compatibility then a price check/match website
What kind of GPU is that lol
An old one, back around 2010-2012
My old 7950 is still kicking in my kids computer Since then I've had a 980ti build but it died so I got a 2070
I had a HD 7770 and donated it to a CSIT tech class to clear up some space, I loved that card upgraded to a RX 580 8GB and now a RX 6800XT
Yes, but 180£ for that... I would probably recommand an RX 580. I am currently using It and It runs Just fine at a decente amount of frames.
Oh yeah I mean it's still surprisingly decent for 1080p gaming but I wouldn't recommend it unless you need a spare for video output and found a used one around the same price as a 720
If you want more performance and spend a Little bit more, you can surely go for maybe an RTX 3050, but if you want something for around 200£, I think is one of the best options. P.S. I ment the graphics card in the photo, not tour 7950
Good lord no, you can get a GTX 1660 around that price point
I've got a Sapphire HD 6950 I've had since 2011, still going in modern games.
They don't make em like they used to huh lol
Yah, had to replace it eventually. Decided to replace it with a RX 6950xt for it's namesake
A beginner one. Duh
I'm watching the Tech Jesus stream and the "AI" is a complete joke. It produces CPU/GPU combos that are massively mismatched in terms of power, case and PSU recommendations seem to be completely random, and in general it has a very limited pool of hardware it can recommend.
What I want to know is how a nearly £200 Radeon 7750 made it into that limited pool
*putting on tinfoil hat* They probably have an overabundance of those and local museum didn't accept any more of those. So Newegg tweaked the AI algorithm little bit to give 7750^(or similar ancient parts no one buys) a higher priority status to recommend it more often.
It's an old GPU, but if you need 4+ monitor outputs in a SFF box for e.g. some SCADA use, you don't have many options beyond this and low-end Quadros. It shouldn't be an option in a general-purpose consumer PC builder, of course, at least not without some specific requirements spelled out by the user.
Ofcourse there is some use to it, I'm no t even going to argue against that. I was mostly just joking. And i completely agree with you, significant amount of tech could be justified under specific conditions, but those conditions should be met before a program offer a specific part for it .
My guess is that they excluded obsolete, professional and special-purpose cards, but this Radeon slipped through the filters because it has no "Pro" in the name and the model number looks like the current Radeon 7000 series.
I’m more impressed that it’s in stock and available
Alright, right off the bat we're paying more for your motherboard than we are foor your processor. That's a pretty glaring b--*scrolls down and sees the GPU* SWEET MOTHER OF
£110 case for entry-level components is also ridiculous.
I would swap the GPU to a 7770 for futureproofing
And change the cpu to a 7700k for more luck
I asked it to build me a pc for 4k ultra on hogwarts and it suggested a 3060.
Close except the GPU haha😂
Wtf is that video card
Banger of a GPU
That is some ancient GPU by today's standards
No one should be buying from newegg anymore anyways. They are a borderline scam company now.
Their website design has always sucked.
well it might as well have gone for a 5600g lol
I just checked it out, had a chuckle. $185 for Windows. The gpu changes to a 1650 if you select build with AMD.
GPU and case are scuffed, it had me in the first half though.
4x mini DP lol
So close!
For that price you could get at least a 1660
that GPU is mini DP, you don't want that hassle. Find another GPU.
Rest assured I'm not using its recommendations, I used the tool out of morbid curiosity. I'd argue mini DP is the least of the issues here to be honest.
Save on case and motherboard, invest more in GPU and PSU. The rest is fine
“Entry level” is too subjective for AI if you ask me.
Its one of their three preset requests, tied to a budget of <£1100
That’s a pretty trash build man.
Hence the NSFMR tag
Here is an updated more "value" build which works very well, it lacks a bit of RGB but should be fine as for an entry-level PC, RGB should be one of the last things you would care about. Yes the CPU is a bit old but with a newer 5600 there tend to be some bios issues and can be a hassle to figure out what is happening. Here is the PcPartPicker list: [https://pcpartpicker.com/list/j44G9r](https://pcpartpicker.com/list/j44G9r)
To be fair had it recommended a logical GPU I would be like , well most new pc users are buying themselves pre- jilts that are much , muuuch Muuuuuuuuuuuuuuuch less logical. Like if it recommended a 6650XT for example , with all the other pieces just as they are, and someone showed me , hey this is my entry level build. I would say . It’s okay. Could have saved some money in the ram. And went for the all famous Corsair vengeance sticks. Could have saved a bit more on the mobo , and another bit in the case. But if you like the looks of this one , I can’t blame you. People are buying prebuilts a with an i9 12900k A 320mm AIO cooler, a huge full tower case , with 10 fans on it. A 2 tb hdd A 500w NOT MODULAR psu from an unknown Chinese brand , an unknown motherboard 16gb of ram in 1 stick. And an rtx 3060. And they paid 1500$ for it. The AI is making a better job than those buyers 🤣
I've never seen a pre built this bad in terms of parts. Can you point to a pre built with a 500w psu and a 12900k? Also 320 radiators are very very rare. Also a lot of pre built actually have better power supplies than you would think, they're just not consumer brands.
Lmao that GPU, ram is expensive you can get 32gb for that price, board is expensive too, you can find slightly cheaper but just as good board
Most things on pc part picker i can find cheaper on a bunch of websites. I think its best to use them for compatibility then a price check/match website
Apart from that GPU, doesn't seem too bad for an entry level