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Not unless your idea of "perfect" is setting fire to a pile of money.

 

In terms of getting the absolute highest end tech possible, that build mostly qualifies, although the choice of middling storage when you're already cashing out your retirement account to buy a computer is odd. That should all be 2TB PCIe 4.0 drives, because why not? This is a dream build anyways.

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D · Cooler: Noctua NH-D15S Chromax.black · Motherboard: Gigabyte Auros X670 Elite AX · RAM: G.Skill Flare X5 64GB (2 x 32GB) DDR5 6000MHz CL30 · Graphics Card: Zotac NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Super Twin Edge OC 12GB · Boot Drive: 1TB XPG Gammix S70 Blade NVMe SSD · Game Drive: 2TB WD SN850X NVMe SSD · PSU: Seasonic Focus GX V3 1000W 80+ Gold · Case: Fractal Design North Mesh · Monitor: MSI Optix MAG342CQR 34” UWQHD 3440x1440 144Hz · Keyboard: EPOMAKER x Aula F99 Wireless Mechanical Keyboard · Mouse: Logitech G309 Lightspeed Wireless Gaming Mouse

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7 minutes ago, Conspiracy2x said:

No, for two reasons.

 

Firstly perfection is relative. There are many occasions for which this build will not be useful at all. Therefore we need to know hat exactly you are going to do with it. 

 

Secondly, good luck running 64GB of memory at 4000MHz with a Ryzen processor

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 - 3900x @ 4.4GHz with a Custom Loop | MBO: ASUS Crosshair VI Extreme | RAM: 4x4GB Apacer 2666MHz overclocked to 3933MHz with OCZ Reaper HPC Heatsinks | GPU: PowerColor Red Devil 6900XT | SSDs: Intel 660P 512GB SSD and Intel 660P 1TB SSD | HDD: 2x WD Black 6TB and Seagate Backup Plus 8TB External Drive | PSU: Corsair RM1000i | Case: Cooler Master C700P Black Edition | Build Log: here

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On 4/13/2021 at 5:02 PM, Chris Pratt said:

Not unless your idea of "perfect" is setting fire to a pile of money.

 

In terms of getting the absolute highest end tech possible, that build mostly qualifies, although the choice of middling storage when you're already cashing out your retirement account to buy a computer is odd. That should all be 2TB PCIe 4.0 drives, because why not? This is a dream build anyways.

Ty for the suggestion, but I am not sure if it will be enough to have 6tb storage for me.

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On 4/13/2021 at 5:03 PM, Analog said:

No, for two reasons.

 

Firstly perfection is relative. There are many occasions for which this build will not be useful at all. Therefore we need to know hat exactly you are going to do with it. 

 

Secondly, good luck running 64GB of memory at 4000MHz with a Ryzen processor

It will be my gaming pc, I am not going to stream or editing anything like that. And whats wrong to have 64gb 4000Mhz memory with a Ryzen processor? Can you please explain.

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On 4/13/2021 at 5:24 PM, DriftMan said:

Are you buying that or, lets say, you are just posting the most expensive build (that makes at least a bit of sense) you found?

Nope its not a show off or anything like that. I am going to build my dream pc. So i put all the parts i could within my knowledge. But i am not 100% sure is that build perfect or not or i need to change something.

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On 4/13/2021 at 5:29 PM, curiousmind34 said:

Thanks for the advice but i dont live in us. So the price will be much different in my country. I just build that list to get suggestion from people like you, so that i can build a perfect PC.

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Main Rig :

Ryzen 7 2700X | Powercolor Red Devil RX 580 8 GB | Gigabyte AB350M Gaming 3 | 16 GB TeamGroup Elite 2400MHz | Samsung 750 EVO 240 GB | HGST 7200 RPM 1 TB | Seasonic M12II EVO | CoolerMaster Q300L | Dell U2518D | Dell P2217H | 

 

Laptop :

Thinkpad X230 | i5 3320M | 8 GB DDR3 | V-Gen 128 GB SSD |

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1 hour ago, Conspiracy2x said:

It will be my gaming pc, I am not going to stream or editing anything like that. And whats wrong to have 64gb 4000Mhz memory with a Ryzen processor? Can you please explain.

Then you don't need to spend that much on the cpu. An R5 5600X or R7 5800X is pretty much all you need for a pure gaming pc.

 

I would rather have one of the Arctic Liquid Freezer II AIO's. There is nothing wrong with NZXT but you are paying more for the brand name.

 

Why such an expensive board ? An MSI B550 Tomahawk or similar will do the same thing. You are paying for things you probably won't use i.e Extreme overkill VRM and extra USB/SATA ports that you will probably never need. 

 

You don't need 64GB Ram for a gaming pc period. You won't get anywhere close to needing that amount. Even 32GB is more than enough.

 

A regular WD SN550 is fine for a gaming system. No real need to pay out for a pcie 4.0 SSD at least until direct storage becomes more of a thing.

 

An RTX 3090 is really bad value for money vs a 3080. You are getting around 15% extra performance for around twice the price.

 

If you go with a 5600X/5800X and RTX 3080 then you won't need a 1200W psu. An 850W would cover you.

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7 hours ago, Conspiracy2x said:

It will be my gaming pc, I am not going to stream or editing anything like that. And whats wrong to have 64gb 4000Mhz memory with a Ryzen processor? Can you please explain.

 

Several things to note:

 

- Whenever you populate all dimm slots or you go very high capacity memory, and you have done both of these things, the RAM becomes exceptionally taxing on the memory controller of the processor and it simply can't keep up. There is a good chance you simply won't be able to boot up at those speeds at all.

 

- Ryzen has infinity fabric (FCLK), which runs in 1:1 with the system memory. It runs at 1800MHz, which means that optimally you need RAM with 3600MHz. The FCLK can be overclocked, but again it is not very reliable, some chips will be hard pressed to overclock passed 1900MHz. The FCLK can also be uncoupled from the memory, but then you need to go 4800MHz+ on the memory in order to overcome the performance loss and at those speeds you certainly will not be able to get your computer started, especially with 64GB or RAM. 

 

- I seriously recommend checking the QVL for your motherboard and see what memory configurations and kits have been validated as working and getting something that is on that list. I am pretty sure the Trident Z Royal are not going to be a part of the validated kits.

 

If you are building a gaming rig, your specs don't really make a lot of sense, but if it is your dream PC, like you have stated, then feel free to burn some cash. Just follow what I have said about the memory, unless you want to constantly have to deal with system instability or settling with running the expensive memory that you got at 3200MHz. 

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 - 3900x @ 4.4GHz with a Custom Loop | MBO: ASUS Crosshair VI Extreme | RAM: 4x4GB Apacer 2666MHz overclocked to 3933MHz with OCZ Reaper HPC Heatsinks | GPU: PowerColor Red Devil 6900XT | SSDs: Intel 660P 512GB SSD and Intel 660P 1TB SSD | HDD: 2x WD Black 6TB and Seagate Backup Plus 8TB External Drive | PSU: Corsair RM1000i | Case: Cooler Master C700P Black Edition | Build Log: here

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I would suggest using the 5900X rather than the 5950X. 

 

Consider using all ssd storage.

 

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 3.7 GHz 12-Core Processor 
CPU Cooler: ARCTIC Liquid Freezer II 360 56.3 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler  ($124.99 @ Amazon) 
Motherboard: MSI MEG B550 UNIFY ATX AM4 Motherboard  ($288.39 @ B&H) 
Memory: G.Skill Trident Z Royal 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR4-3600 CL16 Memory  ($269.99 @ Newegg) 
Storage: Samsung 980 Pro 2 TB M.2-2280 NVME Solid State Drive  ($349.99 @ Amazon) 
Storage: Samsung 870 QVO 8 TB 2.5" Solid State Drive  ($799.76 @ Amazon) 
Video Card: Asus GeForce RTX 3090 24 GB TUF GAMING OC Video Card  ($3499.98 @ Amazon) 
Case: Lian Li PC-O11 Dynamic ATX Full Tower Case  ($159.99 @ Adorama) 
Power Supply: SeaSonic PRIME 850 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  ($179.99 @ Newegg) 
Case Fan: Noctua S12A PWM chromax.black.swap 63.27 CFM 120 mm Fan  ($22.90 @ Amazon) 
Case Fan: Noctua S12A PWM chromax.black.swap 63.27 CFM 120 mm Fan  ($22.90 @ Amazon) 
Case Fan: Noctua S12A PWM chromax.black.swap 63.27 CFM 120 mm Fan  ($22.90 @ Amazon) 
Total: $5741.78
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2021-04-15 07:15 EDT-0400

80+ ratings certify electrical efficiency. Not quality.

 

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6 hours ago, Analog said:

 

Several things to note:

 

- Whenever you populate all dimm slots or you go very high capacity memory, and you have done both of these things, the RAM becomes exceptionally taxing on the memory controller of the processor and it simply can't keep up. There is a good chance you simply won't be able to boot up at those speeds at all.

 

- Ryzen has infinity fabric (FCLK), which runs in 1:1 with the system memory. It runs at 1800MHz, which means that optimally you need RAM with 3600MHz. The FCLK can be overclocked, but again it is not very reliable, some chips will be hard pressed to overclock passed 1900MHz. The FCLK can also be uncoupled from the memory, but then you need to go 4800MHz+ on the memory in order to overcome the performance loss and at those speeds you certainly will not be able to get your computer started, especially with 64GB or RAM. 

 

- I seriously recommend checking the QVL for your motherboard and see what memory configurations and kits have been validated as working and getting something that is on that list. I am pretty sure the Trident Z Royal are not going to be a part of the validated kits.

 

If you are building a gaming rig, your specs don't really make a lot of sense, but if it is your dream PC, like you have stated, then feel free to burn some cash. Just follow what I have said about the memory, unless you want to constantly have to deal with system instability or settling with running the expensive memory that you got at 3200MHz. 

Thanks for all the tips. One question if i buy 3600 MHz memory will it be fine? 

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1 hour ago, brob said:

I would suggest using the 5900X rather than the 5950X. 

 

Consider using all ssd storage.

 

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 3.7 GHz 12-Core Processor 
CPU Cooler: ARCTIC Liquid Freezer II 360 56.3 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler  ($124.99 @ Amazon) 
Motherboard: MSI MEG B550 UNIFY ATX AM4 Motherboard  ($288.39 @ B&H) 
Memory: G.Skill Trident Z Royal 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR4-3600 CL16 Memory  ($269.99 @ Newegg) 
Storage: Samsung 980 Pro 2 TB M.2-2280 NVME Solid State Drive  ($349.99 @ Amazon) 
Storage: Samsung 870 QVO 8 TB 2.5" Solid State Drive  ($799.76 @ Amazon) 
Video Card: Asus GeForce RTX 3090 24 GB TUF GAMING OC Video Card  ($3499.98 @ Amazon) 
Case: Lian Li PC-O11 Dynamic ATX Full Tower Case  ($159.99 @ Adorama) 
Power Supply: SeaSonic PRIME 850 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  ($179.99 @ Newegg) 
Case Fan: Noctua S12A PWM chromax.black.swap 63.27 CFM 120 mm Fan  ($22.90 @ Amazon) 
Case Fan: Noctua S12A PWM chromax.black.swap 63.27 CFM 120 mm Fan  ($22.90 @ Amazon) 
Case Fan: Noctua S12A PWM chromax.black.swap 63.27 CFM 120 mm Fan  ($22.90 @ Amazon) 
Total: $5741.78
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2021-04-15 07:15 EDT-0400

Thanks for the suggestion

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13 hours ago, lee32uk said:

Then you don't need to spend that much on the cpu. An R5 5600X or R7 5800X is pretty much all you need for a pure gaming pc.

 

I would rather have one of the Arctic Liquid Freezer II AIO's. There is nothing wrong with NZXT but you are paying more for the brand name.

 

Why such an expensive board ? An MSI B550 Tomahawk or similar will do the same thing. You are paying for things you probably won't use i.e Extreme overkill VRM and extra USB/SATA ports that you will probably never need. 

 

You don't need 64GB Ram for a gaming pc period. You won't get anywhere close to needing that amount. Even 32GB is more than enough.

 

A regular WD SN550 is fine for a gaming system. No real need to pay out for a pcie 4.0 SSD at least until direct storage becomes more of a thing.

 

An RTX 3090 is really bad value for money vs a 3080. You are getting around 15% extra performance for around twice the price.

 

If you go with a 5600X/5800X and RTX 3080 then you won't need a 1200W psu. An 850W would cover you.

Hey ik i don't need all those fancy stuff for gaming. Ik i don't i don't need 3090 because price to performance ratio is super bad. But that's not the point here. Since it will be my dream pc i just want to put together all they best stuff they have. 

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32 minutes ago, Conspiracy2x said:

Thanks for all the tips. One question if i buy 3600 MHz memory will it be fine? 

 

It should be, but the best thing to do is to check with the QVL of your particular motherboard if which kits are validated as working and to chose a set of the ones on the list. 

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 - 3900x @ 4.4GHz with a Custom Loop | MBO: ASUS Crosshair VI Extreme | RAM: 4x4GB Apacer 2666MHz overclocked to 3933MHz with OCZ Reaper HPC Heatsinks | GPU: PowerColor Red Devil 6900XT | SSDs: Intel 660P 512GB SSD and Intel 660P 1TB SSD | HDD: 2x WD Black 6TB and Seagate Backup Plus 8TB External Drive | PSU: Corsair RM1000i | Case: Cooler Master C700P Black Edition | Build Log: here

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