You can build a $500 gaming PC with these Black Friday deals

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Areas for improvement

  • Storage: A 500GB SSD will fill up pretty quick, especially if you play big blockbuster AAA games. If you can afford it, buy the 1TB version of the Solidigm P41 ($50) instead.
  • Additional fans: The Phanteks model listed above has only one included fan, so you can buy more fans yourself for optimal airflow.

Suggested upgrades:

  • CPU Cooler: This build uses the 5600’s included stock cooler. But using a more powerful aftermarket air cooler will improve your temps and possibly performance if you live in a warm (or downright hot) location. Our recommendation would be a solid performer like the be quiet Pure Rock 2 ($35), which is on sale right now and comes with $5 promotional Newegg gift card.
  • Memory: 16GB will work for many people who primarily game and don’t have a lot of things open at the same time. But DDR4 memory is cheap right now—great news for my fellow browser tab hoarders. Stepping up to 32GB of RAM is just $57 right now.
  • Graphics card: This is more of a sidegrade. Intel has made big strides with its drivers since the launch of its Arc cards, but for people who’d prefer more polished experience, the Radeon RX 6600 is about the same price right now. No free game, though.
  • Power supply: Generally, you want the nicest power supply you can afford—but since this is an article about deals, I usually choose a more affordable one. You can look through this PSU tier list if you prefer a higher-rated one. Also, my suggested PSU lacks an additional 4-pin power cable—which is fine if you only plan to use the PC for gaming and productivity tasks. If you need more juice for, say, overclocking, upgrade your PSU choice.

Possible downgrade

  • Motherboard: You can save $25 by dropping down to this $60 ASRock B450 microATX motherboard. It still has Wi-Fi and support for RGB/ARGB fans, but be aware that you get fewer PCIe expansion slots and lose PCIe 4.0 support. Running this build’s SSD and graphics card in PCIe 3.0 is still plenty fast, though. You also need to flash the BIOS on this motherboard for it to be compatible with Ryzen 5000.
  • CPU: The Ryzen 5 5600 is a stronger performer all around—but if you don’t play games where CPU performance matters as much (e.g., AAA titles), you could save another $8 and drop down to the Ryzen 5 5500. The Ryzen 5 5500 doesn’t support PCIe 4.0 though, so this choice is best if you also drop the motherboard to the B450 model suggested above.

Alternatives

No Windows, B450 mobo variant – $505
  • If you must slash costs, you can drop down to a B450 motherboard (see above suggestion) and ditch Windows in favor of Linux. Just be aware that while Linux and Windows are closer in parity for gaming, they’re not equal yet.
Micro Center variant – $510

The $700 1440p Black Friday gaming PC build

This build comes in just a little over $700—though you could shave down the price even more if you really wanted. And you can pack in a heck of a lot more CPU performance if you’re able to build the alternative version of it.

PartNamePrice
CPURyzen 5 5600$128
MotherboardASRock B550 Phantom Gaming 4/ac ATX AM4 Motherboard[1]$85
RAMTeamgroup T-Force Vulcan Z DDR4-3600 (2x8GB)$35
Graphics CardXFX Speedster Swift309 Radeon RX 6700 XT$300
StorageSolidigm P41 Plus 1TB M.2 NVMe SSD$50
PSUThermaltake Smart BM3 650W 80+ Bronze Semi-Modular[2]$60
CasePhanteks Eclipse G300A ATX Mid-Tower Case[3]$35
OSWindows 10 or 11 Pro OEM$23
Total$715
  1. This motherboard may require flashing to a newer BIOS to work with Ryzen 5000 processors. You can request a free loaner boot kit from AMD for this purpose. A local computer shop may also be able to perform this service for a fee.
  2. Use promo code BFDAYWCYA747 at checkout.
  3. Use promo code TTNV567733B at checkout. Also includes a $10 Newegg digital gift card with purchase.

This 1440p build sports a 6-core, 12-thread processor that supports PCIe 4.0; an ATX motherboard that supports RGB and ARGB fans and has plenty of PCIe expansion slots; 16GB of DDR4-3600 memory (Ryzen 5000’s sweet spot for RAM speed); a high-performing and popular NVMe SSD; on-board Wi-Fi and Bluetooth; and an attractive airflow case. The Windows 11 license is included, too, and the key is legit—the license is through PCWorld’s affiliated shop.

For this price point, I’ve bumped up the storage capacity, though you could still very easily jump up even further to 2TB.

Only one caveat exists for this build: You’ll need to flash the BIOS before the Ryzen 5 5600 will work in the motherboard.

Suggested upgrades:

  • CPU Cooler: A more powerful air cooler will improve your temps and possibly performance if you live somewhere warm. Pick a solid performer like the be quiet Pure Rock 2 ($35), which is on sale right now and comes with $5 promotional Newegg gift card.
  • Memory: DDR4 RAM is cheap right now, which is great if you love browser tabs. You can step up to
Creată 2y | 24 nov. 2023, 17:30:04


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