This Any Good For future gaming?

Operating System: microsoft windows 7 home premium
Power Supply: Corsair TX650 V2 650W
Processor: Intel core i7 3770 3.4ghz
RAM: 6GB Coursair DDR3 XMS3 1600MHz/pc12800
Motherboard: Asus p8z77-v lx
Graphics card: AMD/ATI Radeon HD 7950 3gb
Hard Drive: Seagate Barracuda 1TB hard drive 7200rpm 32mb cache
Sound card: integrated 7.1 channel audio
Optical Drive: Sony 24x dvd/cd Re-Writer black
Network card: Integrated 10/100/1000mbps
Wireless Card: asus n10 150mbps

Can we put up a guide on how to use lists, or at least the enter key? Please?

LOL i know right; it is driving me nuts to the point of just leaving a build thread.

Kindly make your build plans into a list similar to this fashion...

Operating System: microsoft windows 7 home premium

Power Supply: Corsair TX650 V2 650W

Processor: Intel core i7 3770 3.4ghz

RAM: 6GB Coursair DDR3 XMS3 1600MHz/pc12800

Motherboard: Asus p8z77-v lx

Graphics card: AMD/ATI Radeon HD 7950 3gb

Hard Drive: Seagate Barracuda 1TB hard drive 7200rpm 32mb cache

Sound card: integrated 7.1 channel audio

Optical Drive: Sony 24x dvd/cd Re-Writer black

card: Integrated 10/100/1000mbps Wireless Card: asus n10 150mbps

 

 

this makes it more pleasing to the eyes for us.

also, if you can, tell us your budget for this build

If this is for gaming:

Grab an i5 2500k/3570k, also grab an after market cooler, CM 212+/EVO will do for your budget. Grab a 550W bronze PSU, you don't need 650W, take the money you save from those and upgrade to an HD 7970. Swap the mobo out for something better, don't have a model number off the top of my head at the moment though, I'll let someone else fill that in.

 

 

Please read this article.

http://teksyndicate.com/users/teebler/blog/2012/11/04/how-make-good-parts-list

Dude, just get rid of the 7950 in place of a MSI GTX 670  PE OC.

And change your i7 to an i5 or i3 and upgrade it later. The GPU is MOST IMPORTANT when gaming. Your bottleneck will be less than 10FPS if you use an i3 vs an i5. Honestly people worry so much about processors. Gaming is about the GPU 99 times out of 100 and people screw themselves quite a bit by forgetting that. The 670 will give you adaptive V-synch which if you have a large monitor, or more than 1, is an intangible AMD can't provide. 

no, stick with the amd gpu, but DO get the i5, and bup up to a 7970

@kanuk

don't mean to hate at you, but most of your ideas are just nvidia fanboyness

Its so funny i see people complaining about him all the time, haha. But, i would have to disagree on the bump up to a 7970. Its a good $100 more, and you can get one with good cooling for that price. Use that money to get a niiiice heatsink. Thats what i would say, however.

My bad, that was terribly worded. retry:  I agree on the "downgrade" (if you can even call it that) to the i5, but i would still go with a 7950, considering you can get them approximately $100 cheaper than the 7970. The 7950's also overclock to oblivion, well past a stock 7970. My advice to OP is to overclock a 7950 if need-be, drop down to the i5, get an aftermarket cooler, and get a 2x4GB memory kit.

Yeah, sure, cause there aren't any games like Skyrim or Starcraft.

And he didn't say he wanted it to be futureproof

And 10 less fps wouldn't matter much even if the i5=30 fps average and the i3=20fps average

And yes! The CPU shouldn't be fussed about! Screw i3, go get a Celeron or better yet, a Sempron 2600+!

Then you will be able to buy a 670, which is way better than a 7970. Because at $350, a 670 factory oc'ed to 925Mhz and has 2GBs of ram, is way better than a $350 7950 at 1.0Ghz, has 3GBs of ram, and has an aftermarket cooler!