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So atm I have a 750Ti, Intel 1037u CPU and 8gb ram, I want to upgrade and I got recomended this:

build from someone on this site, the Ryzen 3 1200 is £76 for me, basically £77 but I seen a Ryzen 3 2200G for £89.99, with the CPU upgrades would it be worth to pay the little extra for the 2200G rather than the 1200? and also what performance increase would I be looking at for Fortnite, CS:GO and other demanding titles like that?

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Consider getting a higher end processor and keep using the 750ti for a little while longer until you can afford a rx 570/80.

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1 minute ago, Brandanxd said:

So atm I have a 750Ti, Intel 1037u CPU and 8gb ram, I want to upgrade and I got recomended this:

build from someone on this site, the Ryzen 3 1200 is £76 for me, basically £77 but I seen a Ryzen 3 2200G for £89.99, with the CPU upgrades would it be worth to pay the little extra for the 2200G rather than the 1200? and also what performance increase would I be looking at for Fortnite, CS:GO and other demanding titles like that?

The main difference between the 2200G and the 1200 is that the 2200G has built in graphics. Since you already have a dedicated GPU on the list (the GTX 1050Ti), I don't see much of a reason to get the 2200G. Unless you want to get/have a FreeSync monitor and want to exploit the glitch where you run FreeSync with the Nvidia GPU

Primary PC: - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/8G3tXv (Windows 10 Home)

HTPC: - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/KdBb4n (Windows 10 Home)
Server: Dell Precision T7500 - Dual Xeon X5660's, 44GB ECC DDR3, Dell Nvidia GTX 645 (Windows Server 2019 Standard)      

*SLI Rig* - i7-920, MSI-X58 Platinum SLI, 12GB DDR3, Dual EVGA GTX 260 Core 216 in SLI - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/GHw6vW (Windows 7 Pro)

HP DC7900 - Core 2 Duo E8400, 4GB DDR2, Nvidia GeForce 8600 GT (Windows Vista)

Compaq Presario 5000 - Pentium 4 1.7Ghz, 1.7GB SDR, PowerColor Radeon 9600 Pro (Windows XP x86 Pro)
Compaq Presario 8772 - Pentium MMX 200Mhz, 48MB PC66, 6GB Quantum HDD, "8GB" HP SATA SSD adapted to IDE (Windows 98 SE)

Asus M32AD - Intel i3-4170, 8GB DDR3, 250GB Seagate 2.5" HDD (converting to SSD soon), EVGA GeForce GTS 250, OEM 350W PSU (Windows 10 Core)

*Haswell Tower* https://pcpartpicker.com/list/3vw6vW (Windows 10 Home)

*ITX Box* - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/r36s6R (Windows 10 Education)

Dell Dimension XPS B800 - Pentium 3 800Mhz, RDRAM

In progress projects:

*Skylake Tower* - Pentium G4400, Asus H110

*Trash Can* - AMD A4-6300

*GPU Test Bench*

*Pfsense router* - Pentium G3220, Asrock H97m Pro A4, 4GB DDR3

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7 minutes ago, Eastman51 said:

The main difference between the 2200G and the 1200 is that the 2200G has built in graphics. Since you already have a dedicated GPU on the list (the GTX 1050Ti), I don't see much of a reason to get the 2200G. Unless you want to get/have a FreeSync monitor and want to exploit the glitch where you run FreeSync with the Nvidia GPU

I would do this, however my little cousin will be getting this current PC for his homework and slight gaming etc.

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4 minutes ago, Eastman51 said:

The main difference between the 2200G and the 1200 is that the 2200G has built in graphics

The 2200G also has a higher clock speed which would be beneficial to CS:GO (3.4 vs 3.7 GHz Turbo)

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Just now, Brandanxd said:

I would do this, however my little cousin will be getting this current PC for his homework and slight gaming etc.

If you aren't going to get a FreeSync monitor, you have no reason to spend extra on a CPU with a feature you won't use.

Primary PC: - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/8G3tXv (Windows 10 Home)

HTPC: - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/KdBb4n (Windows 10 Home)
Server: Dell Precision T7500 - Dual Xeon X5660's, 44GB ECC DDR3, Dell Nvidia GTX 645 (Windows Server 2019 Standard)      

*SLI Rig* - i7-920, MSI-X58 Platinum SLI, 12GB DDR3, Dual EVGA GTX 260 Core 216 in SLI - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/GHw6vW (Windows 7 Pro)

HP DC7900 - Core 2 Duo E8400, 4GB DDR2, Nvidia GeForce 8600 GT (Windows Vista)

Compaq Presario 5000 - Pentium 4 1.7Ghz, 1.7GB SDR, PowerColor Radeon 9600 Pro (Windows XP x86 Pro)
Compaq Presario 8772 - Pentium MMX 200Mhz, 48MB PC66, 6GB Quantum HDD, "8GB" HP SATA SSD adapted to IDE (Windows 98 SE)

Asus M32AD - Intel i3-4170, 8GB DDR3, 250GB Seagate 2.5" HDD (converting to SSD soon), EVGA GeForce GTS 250, OEM 350W PSU (Windows 10 Core)

*Haswell Tower* https://pcpartpicker.com/list/3vw6vW (Windows 10 Home)

*ITX Box* - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/r36s6R (Windows 10 Education)

Dell Dimension XPS B800 - Pentium 3 800Mhz, RDRAM

In progress projects:

*Skylake Tower* - Pentium G4400, Asus H110

*Trash Can* - AMD A4-6300

*GPU Test Bench*

*Pfsense router* - Pentium G3220, Asrock H97m Pro A4, 4GB DDR3

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Just now, Gungpae said:

The 2200G also has a higher clock speed which would be beneficial to CS:GO (3.4 vs 3.7 GHz Turbo)

He'd probably be better off getting the 1200 for cheaper and putting a slight OC on it.

Primary PC: - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/8G3tXv (Windows 10 Home)

HTPC: - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/KdBb4n (Windows 10 Home)
Server: Dell Precision T7500 - Dual Xeon X5660's, 44GB ECC DDR3, Dell Nvidia GTX 645 (Windows Server 2019 Standard)      

*SLI Rig* - i7-920, MSI-X58 Platinum SLI, 12GB DDR3, Dual EVGA GTX 260 Core 216 in SLI - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/GHw6vW (Windows 7 Pro)

HP DC7900 - Core 2 Duo E8400, 4GB DDR2, Nvidia GeForce 8600 GT (Windows Vista)

Compaq Presario 5000 - Pentium 4 1.7Ghz, 1.7GB SDR, PowerColor Radeon 9600 Pro (Windows XP x86 Pro)
Compaq Presario 8772 - Pentium MMX 200Mhz, 48MB PC66, 6GB Quantum HDD, "8GB" HP SATA SSD adapted to IDE (Windows 98 SE)

Asus M32AD - Intel i3-4170, 8GB DDR3, 250GB Seagate 2.5" HDD (converting to SSD soon), EVGA GeForce GTS 250, OEM 350W PSU (Windows 10 Core)

*Haswell Tower* https://pcpartpicker.com/list/3vw6vW (Windows 10 Home)

*ITX Box* - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/r36s6R (Windows 10 Education)

Dell Dimension XPS B800 - Pentium 3 800Mhz, RDRAM

In progress projects:

*Skylake Tower* - Pentium G4400, Asus H110

*Trash Can* - AMD A4-6300

*GPU Test Bench*

*Pfsense router* - Pentium G3220, Asrock H97m Pro A4, 4GB DDR3

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26 minutes ago, Eastman51 said:

He'd probably be better off getting the 1200 for cheaper and putting a slight OC on it.

 

Good point, however I'd have to look how to overclock etc.

Here is a new one I've found:
CPU: Ryzen 2300X 4.0GHz
GPU: RX 570 4GB

RAM: 8GB DDR4 2400MHz

Storage: 240GB SSD.

 

This is around £500 give or take, however I've heard good and bad things about the GPU.

 

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4 minutes ago, Brandanxd said:

 

Good point, however I'd have to look how to overclock etc.

Here is a new one I've found:
CPU: Ryzen 2300X 4.0GHz
GPU: RX 570 4GB

RAM: 8GB DDR4 2400MHz

Storage: 240GB SSD.

 

This is around £500 give or take, however I've heard good and bad things about the GPU.

 

Honestly, what you could do is just get the 2300x in the original build. The 1050Ti is better than an RX 570.

I would highly recommend you get an SSD as well, though if you can't afford it don't bother.

 

Edit: As long as you get a B350 board, OC will be fine. Ryzen Master makes OC easy (supposedly, though I can't figure it out, lol)

Primary PC: - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/8G3tXv (Windows 10 Home)

HTPC: - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/KdBb4n (Windows 10 Home)
Server: Dell Precision T7500 - Dual Xeon X5660's, 44GB ECC DDR3, Dell Nvidia GTX 645 (Windows Server 2019 Standard)      

*SLI Rig* - i7-920, MSI-X58 Platinum SLI, 12GB DDR3, Dual EVGA GTX 260 Core 216 in SLI - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/GHw6vW (Windows 7 Pro)

HP DC7900 - Core 2 Duo E8400, 4GB DDR2, Nvidia GeForce 8600 GT (Windows Vista)

Compaq Presario 5000 - Pentium 4 1.7Ghz, 1.7GB SDR, PowerColor Radeon 9600 Pro (Windows XP x86 Pro)
Compaq Presario 8772 - Pentium MMX 200Mhz, 48MB PC66, 6GB Quantum HDD, "8GB" HP SATA SSD adapted to IDE (Windows 98 SE)

Asus M32AD - Intel i3-4170, 8GB DDR3, 250GB Seagate 2.5" HDD (converting to SSD soon), EVGA GeForce GTS 250, OEM 350W PSU (Windows 10 Core)

*Haswell Tower* https://pcpartpicker.com/list/3vw6vW (Windows 10 Home)

*ITX Box* - https://pcpartpicker.com/list/r36s6R (Windows 10 Education)

Dell Dimension XPS B800 - Pentium 3 800Mhz, RDRAM

In progress projects:

*Skylake Tower* - Pentium G4400, Asus H110

*Trash Can* - AMD A4-6300

*GPU Test Bench*

*Pfsense router* - Pentium G3220, Asrock H97m Pro A4, 4GB DDR3

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