What if I buy parts that don't fit together when building a PC. How do you know which part are compatible with others?
You should probably stick to consoles if you cannot figure this out on your own.
What if I buy parts that don't fit together when building a PC. How do you know which part are compatible with others?
You should probably stick to consoles if you cannot figure this out on your own.
I was hoping to have specs that would allow me to have "Max Settings" for a very long time. I'm torn between AMD and Nvidia. Some say AMD is best, but others say Nvidia is best. My previous time playing on PC was on a Laptop.
My plan was to buy all the cross platform games I play for PC. They all looked better on PC on platform comparison videos. These games are the Mass Effect series, Assasin's Creed, Mirror's Edge, Batman Arkham, and Alien Isolation. I'm going to buy Mass Effect: Andromeda for PC. There's also Star Wars: Battlefront coming this fall.
I'm buying all cross platform games that I enjoy playing--and are available for PC-- for the PC. I plan on playing only console exclusives on my PS3 and PS4. Hell, I might purchase an XB1.
I looked at the recommended requirements for games like Assassin's Creed Unity on PC, and the specs are high. And the specs increase each year?
Keep I mind that I'm not a competitive gamer. I play to have fun.
What if I were to buy an AMD R9 380 graphics card? How good would that be? What if I buy parts that don't fit together when building a PC. How do you know which part are compatible with others?
Any computer you build now will be obsolete by time MEA comes out (18months from now) so the sky will have fallen with ME Shepards, and EA server updates will not allow you to even play the game. What will you do? crawl in a corner and turtle?
I can figure this out. I'm just trying to properly plan ahead so I don't screw up.
Then use the mighty resources of the Internet and research. There's a million and one sites (at least) dedicated to the very thing you are asking about. My guess is even the worst of them has more information about cobbling together a self built PC than what you will ever find here.