• I need help picking a computer.
    40 replies, posted
[QUOTE=Ryzo;18341012]Nope. My friends are awesome.[/QUOTE] Obviously not yours don't know how to build a computer.
If you don't want to build, then you don't really care too much about gaming. Get a refurbished Dell.
[QUOTE=Ryzo;18339759]I have gave a reason before which was that I don't think I'll manage and/or fuck it all up and that's my money thrown down the shitter, so I'm ok with a pre-built. :colbert:[/QUOTE] Your money is being thrown down the shitter by buying a prebuilt.
[QUOTE=sbradford26;18340868]It doesn't take long to build a computer you can build it in like 2 hours if you are taking it slow. Also you could just find somebody to build it for you if it is a friend it could be pretty cheap.[/QUOTE] ha 2 hours i can build one in 10 minutes and still have better cable managing than a prebuilt
its not that fucking hard, you basically plug stuff in where it fits buying a prebuilt is the worst idea ever, how hard is it to get that through your puny fucking head
building a pc is only confusing if someone hands you the crap and the case and tells u to put it together, if you have a pc right now, use it as an example for building
Guys. He said he wants to buy a pre-built, he just wants a recommendation. Same thing Ryzo, PM me if you need some help finding one.
[QUOTE=demonguard;18343457]its not that fucking hard, you basically plug stuff in where it fits buying a prebuilt is the worst idea ever, how hard is it to get that through your puny fucking head[/QUOTE] Buying a prebuilt without any idea how to decide it's good, is a bad idea. Which the OP is following quite to the word, since he's asking us. My was a prebuild then tons of upgrades :D, back then I saved ton of money, still clugging today's games.
Building a computer is like lego with a screwdriver. It could be fun and you get to choose the case, which is nice considering you break the mold with all the standard OEM boxes, I've had quite a few Xbox people look at my computer and say that they really like it. You learn how it all goes together, thus making it easier to maintain, repair and upgrade. You're also likely to get better support from the manufacturers, as you call the GPU manufacturer about a graphics problem and they won't ask you if the tower is plugged in, they go right into it. Just try asking a company like Acer a support question, I made a ticket about the fan noise on my netbook and they told me to reinstall Windows, disregarding anything that I wrote. Plus you get the satisfaction that when you reach and press that power button, you know that you connected that power button to the appropriate header on the motherboard, then power flows to all the components that you plugged in from the power supply that you mounted.
[QUOTE=benjgvps;18345069]Building a computer is like lego with a screwdriver. It could be fun and you get to choose the case, which is nice considering you break the mold with all the standard OEM boxes, I've had quite a few Xbox people look at my computer and say that they really like it. You learn how it all goes together, thus making it easier to maintain, repair and upgrade. You're also likely to get better support from the manufacturers, as you call the GPU manufacturer about a graphics problem and they won't ask you if the tower is plugged in, they go right into it. Just try asking a company like Acer a support question, I made a ticket about the fan noise on my netbook and they told me to reinstall Windows, disregarding anything that I wrote. Plus you get the satisfaction that when you reach and press that power button, you know that you connected that power button to the appropriate header on the motherboard, then power flows to all the components that you plugged in from the power supply that you mounted.[/QUOTE] Read this.
Yes, I have.
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