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Will it Bottleneck?

Go to solution Solved by jtmoseley,
2 minutes ago, UndecidedPurchaser said:

Would the AMD Athlon 3000G do the trick? I dont have much budget for Cpu's if im getting a graphics card too.

Actually I apologize I looked up benchmarks and it actually isn't as slow as I thought it was. I would get a 770 or a 960 or a 1050ti or something

11 hours ago, UndecidedPurchaser said:

I have a motherboard that only has PCI 2.0 and i want to get a graphics card.

Honestly, I'd recommend just going for a decent new system with a used Ryzen 2400G or 3400G, then save up for a low-end RX 6000 or RTX 3000 GPU. The Vega 11 in the Ryzen G CPUs is actually quite decent, (on par with the 1050TI if clocked the same as the dedicated Vega GPUs, which it definitely can do, with DDR4 3200 RAM) and the CPU itself will be easy to upgrade later for inexpensive after you get a dedicated GPU.

 

It might end up being slightly more expensive initially to go this route, but you'll spend less in the long-run to upgrade like this now. You can even use your current PSU and case for this upgrade, and get a new PSU when you get the GPU. (you'd need to anyways)

CPURyzen 7 5800X with Arctic Liquid Freezer II 120mm AIO & push-pull Arctic P12 PWM fans RAM: G.Skill Ripjaws V 4x8GB 3600 16-16-16-30

PSU: Be Quiet! Pure Power 12 M 1000W GPUASRock RX 5700 XT Reference with Eiswolf GPX-Pro 240 AIO & 2x Arctic P12 PWM fans Case: Antec P5

MotherboardASRock X570M Pro4 Monitor: ASUS ROG Strix XG32VC Storage: HP EX950 1TB NVMe, Mushkin Pilot-E 1TB NVMe, 2x Constellation ES 2TB in RAID1

https://hwbot.org/submission/4497882_btgbullseye_gpupi_v3.3___32b_radeon_rx_5700_xt_13min_37sec_848ms

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6 hours ago, BTGbullseye said:

Honestly, I'd recommend just going for a decent new system with a used Ryzen 2400G or 3400G, then save up for a low-end RX 6000 or RTX 3000 GPU. The Vega 11 in the Ryzen G CPUs is actually quite decent, (on par with the 1050TI if clocked the same as the dedicated Vega GPUs, which it definitely can do, with DDR4 3200 RAM) and the CPU itself will be easy to upgrade later for inexpensive after you get a dedicated GPU.

 

It might end up being slightly more expensive initially to go this route, but you'll spend less in the long-run to upgrade like this now. You can even use your current PSU and case for this upgrade, and get a new PSU when you get the GPU. (you'd need to anyways)

That's what i was going to do! Im going to get a 1650 super with the ryzen 5 2400g for my pc.

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16 hours ago, Mateyyy said:

So instead of getting a much stronger i7-2600(K) or 3770(K), OP should get a marginally better 3000G, along with a new motherboard and memory? Or what is it that you are trying to get to?

Sure you'd have an actual upgrade path if OP was to get a decent B450 board, but we're talking about a very strict budget here, from what I could see.

You're right, my budyget is pretty low from what could be considered "normal".

I already have got the computer and the motherboard (even if it's old) Now i only need the new cpu and gpu. Which at the current time will be: 

New CPU: Ryzen 5 2400g
New GPU: Nvidia GTX 1650 Super
 

The Ryzen 5 2400g is just 99€ right now on my amazon list and the GTX 1650 super 175€ meaning i spend about 274€ on the upgrade.

I decided to take out the anthlon 3000g cpu because it did about 30% bottleneck for the gtx 1650 super.

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