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Note that due to the immense amount of negative feedback, I am not continuing the series. I will leave the first computer builds up that I have made but will not continue. Sorry that I have wasted your and my own time. I will never do this again.

 

Only a 650 TI in a $1000 gaming build? That seems a little weak.

 

Edit: Or are the asteriks there for a reason?

I don't see the poing of having a K-series processor without a Z87 chipset, especially if you're getting an aftermarket video card already in this build, and when the Xeon E3 1230 v3 has hyperthreading, no onboard video, and doesn't support overclocking (as neither does that motherboard). It has near-4770K performance, minus the overclocking, for around 240$, making it a much better value choice. And then there's the warranty and reliability to consider. =)

This is a misallocation of funds. Why get a premium processor and pair it with a really low end GPU? And the motherboard chipset will not allow you to overclock the K edition.

Would be much better off using a lower-end CPU, like the 750k, pairing it with a 7870 or 270x, for much more performance.

 

I liked your first build more because it appeared to be much more balanced. Forgiving a few details.

Please stop, your build's have been very expensive and unbalanced thay remind me of pre builds.

^This. 

+1

The build has been updated as of 1/9/14 at 15:39 pm EST

They had a reason, but I decided that it would be too complicated

Think it looks better.

But any K edition processor should be on a Z87 or corresponding generational Z chipset. Because this is the CPU overclocking chipset for unlocked K processors. The H87 is a good chipset that has many of the features of Z87 - but not overclocking. I would simply change the 4670k to an ordinary 4670, or a 4750 or other 4th generation i5.

these builds are terrible. im sorry.

so your are asking that i stop or i make them better?

im asking that you actually build something other than making a list anyone can make. or at the very least, some justification for the various parts you choose.

Alright. I can do that. One sooner than the other though.

How good is that Thermaltake PSU?

I thinks its good, its also 80+ bronze certified so it saves you money on you power bill.

Heres the link if you want to see yourself:

Thermaltake SMART Series 650W ATX 12V 2.3 SLI Ready/CrossFire Ready 80 PLUS BRONZE Certified Active PFC Power Supply

ya , agree.

Well, due to the immense amount of negative feedback, i will be stopping the series. I realized that i have wasted yours and my own time and I am dearly sorry. I will never do this again.

I thinks its good, its also 80+ bronze certified so it saves you money on you power bill.

That has nothing to do with how good a PSU is.

hey devious, check your email yet?

EDIT: (its a good suprise! :D)