this post was submitted on 10 Sep 2024
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I love my Deck.
If you're interested in higher performance, have a use case for a desktop, are willing to go for used parts you put together yourself; then you could get a really decent performance PC for the price of a Deck.
Seriously, buying used parts when building a gaming PC is the way to go if you're looking to save some money. I just snagged a used 6700 XT for $220 (~400 new) and a used 3070 earlier this year for $300 (~500 new) on ebay, and better deals could be had if you're willing to be patient and hunt for a good deal.
There are benefits to buying new (such as warranty), but you can save some serious cheddar if you shop smart.
You could also buy cheaper 'lesser' parts if you're not interested in playing the top of the top new games. I basically only play league, ff14 and indie games. My 12 year old laptop can run everything I play still with no problem (I know cause I take it to my girlfriend when I stay over), granted I do have a pretty nice pc now a days.
This is a great point as well. I'm not huge into gaming myself, with the 3070 being mostly a move to futureproof my build for what few games I do play/may want to play. I actually use it more for transcoding my media collection and AI upscaling some of the older stuff that isn't available anywhere in higher quality than 480p. But for gaming, this thing will probably get me by for another 7-10 years.
That's exactly why I don't understand the general pushback against the idea of "future-proofing" builds in the PC gaming community.
Like, I get it - even the best computer today isn't going to run the latest and greatest triple-A titles at 8K (or whatever the new gold standard resolution of tomorrow will be) on ultra settings at 240fps in 5-10 years from now. I also understand that it isn't wise to drop thousands on today's top of the line hardware under the premise that it'll be the last system you'll ever need.
But unless there's some major breakthrough in tech that completely obsoletes today's hardware into oblivion and upends the market to designing everything for way more powerful/different computers (which granted, is technically possible), or your goal is to run the latest and greatest at the best settings at ridiculously high frame rates and resolutions all the time, then a computer built with decent gear today is still gonna run decent for years to come. And you can typically piecemeal upgrades if necessary, at least with desktops, especially if you're starting with 'lesser' components.
I've been sitting on a new build (7800X3D/6700XT/32gb ram) for a few months now that's set to replace my current HTPC, but I haven't gotten around to putting it together because I've been working on some software to 1-click export all my software settings (win debloat + all program settings that I've manually configured over the years) so I can do a fresh install of Windows instead of just cloning the boot drive like the last time. Plus I'm lazy/distracted/busy with other shit.
But the HTPC that it's replacing? A 10-year old Optiplex 9020 with a 4th-gen Intel CPU + GTX 1650 and 16gb of ram. Runs well enough for what my family plays that it hasn't required this upgrade to be urgent (thankfully), and that's with my kids using it as (one of) their main gaming machines. If we were more hardcore into gaming, or just snobbish about graphics settings and framerates, then maybe the upgrade would be more of a necessity at an earlier point, but saying "there's no such thing as futureproofing a PC" is just the flip side of "spend a small fortune and you'll never have to upgrade again!!!1".
I've been seeing some NIB triple-fan 6750XTs drop as low as $300 in the last few months. I paid $420 just over a year and a half ago ;-;