Hope you found this informative! Not hating on all pre-builts btw. There are some good ones too (Corsair, NZXT, etc.). Btw links to the parts featured in my DIY list are in the description. :) and don't forget to... stay home, wash your hands, LIKE and SUBSCRIBE.
I agree for current prices but I'd offer that there was a time during the Bitcoin phase where prebuilts were the only way to get graphics cards and RAM closest to MSRP. I decided to try one during that time (when my PC died) and have been slowly upgrading all the parts. Great video 👌
I have a skytech blaze II, it has a 2060 super, and a ryzen 7 2700x, it looks nothing like it does in the picture it shows 2 dim slots, mine has 4, 2x8gb or ram, it is really good
@@californium-2526 Random other guy: Threadripper 3990X I mean might as well spend the entire budget on the CPU. Atleast it's a nice box to look at. But yes realisticly 3800X/9900K for gaming only and 3950X/3960X for content creation + other stuff.
AMD for PCIE 4.0! Me an AMD 3700x on a x570 ASUS board with 2 NVME 1tb drives. PCIE 4.0 allows more storage and is ready for next gen graphics card. I'm using 7 SATA ports in addition to the 2 NVME drives without any add-in card and still have room to grow. The AMD 3800X does not give much of a boost in performance over the 3700X for the increased price unless you can find it on sale. The AMD platform also gives a superior CPU upgrade path over Intel which is constantly changing their socket design. No I'm not am AMD fanboy; in fact this was my first AMD build and I used Intel prior.
I bought 2600 like 9 months before 1600 af released maybe those guys also build pc's before 1600 af is released. I wonder if Kyle blames me for not using time machine to buy 1600 af instead of 2600
@@Hecci1006 people who arent tech savvy, teens who just want a computer and dont know what their buying, parents/grandparents who dont know anything about computers, they all can easily fall for these because "TVs, game consoles, phones all come prebuilt as well" We arent born knowing things, we are taught either directly or by assumption, what is "obvious" for you isnt for someone who doesn't know anything about computers
its funny I built mine and ended up with that case in the thumbnail, dont ask why I picked it. idk i think it was a budget thing at the time.. I planned on changing the case when I upgraded so idk LOL
I feel like I joined an elite club when I built my first PC a few weeks ago. Having a computer this nice is a real dream come true for me, and though I spent a lot on it, I'm so glad I got a good value for it. I went to a website where they listed the components for a pc build and put in Amazon links so I could add it all to my cart and upgrade anything I felt like splurging more on, like the SSD and the ram. It's also nice to know exactly what is in my computer.
I just built my first ever PC yesterday. Worse experience of my life. It took me 10-12 hours to figurd that shit out. All the screws the wires the connectors. I learned a lot but fuck. If you felt like you belong to an elite club. I felt like I was conned into thinking how enjoyable and easy it would be lol
@@halcyonramirez6469 Yeah, whoever told you that it would be easy definitely lied. It's extremely complicated. My cables are still kinda ugly in there.
In where I live pre builts are cheaper (every part is listed so I know what I'm buying), than getting all the parts and building it myself. My country is weird
Some of the same low end power supply is basically the same power supply that you are using, with a different reputable sticker. GN Greatwall PSU example.
I understand that some are intimidated in building their own pc. I consider myself as non-tech savy, but I've already built 2 systems/rigs and it's a really cool experience, its not very hard. You get to choose your own parts, how powerful you want it to be, taking in consideration your budget. I highly recommend it!
@@ShinGidora The part that took the longest for me was making sure I got the wirings for the front IO right, the rest of the build was pretty much a breeze. Well, the cable management took some time as well.
I got a pre built back in 2014. With the parts it had, that pre built was cheaper than buying all parts seperately. It was GTX 760 paired with an i5-4570 and 8GB of RAM along with a 1TB drive. Paid 750 euros for it. The card alone was 300 euros back in the day, as for the CPU it was probably 250€ but I don't remember too well. The only thing that concerned me was the cheap power supply from an unknown brand but it ended up lasting 6 years. Since then I have changed all parts individually at one point. I would say for the first time, it's okay to get a pre built as long as you understand the specs and value they offer so you don't get scammed. After that, just buy the hardware you need.
@@trevorrovert3103 some, I can list about 3 that I know of that are not bad. Nzxt prebuilts, cyberpower, and finally, some Asus prebuilts. Bash me if you want, that's just what I've found.
@@CSEabdulalimkhan a first generation i5 is still a i5 but my i3 8100 outperforms every non k i5 from before 6th gen since 7th gen i5s actually somewhat outperform the i3 8100
Kyle this is a very useful and informative video for 1st timers. I have never bought an off-the-shelf PC. My current PC is a self-build, but my previous 3 were custom builds by a company in the UK called PC Specialist. They work similar to a parts pickers and then they build your PC to your spec, you probably have a myriad of companies in the US who do the same thing. I found this very helpful as, until now, I wasn't very confident in building a PC myself.
Prebuilt in a nut shell Power supply: Super-X “600” watt power supply CPU: ryzen 5 1600 Gpu 4gb gtx 1660 Mother board: found in the trash can Ram: one 8gb stick from oollooy brand Case: Lots of rgb 500gb hdd: from the bin Ssd: *Sorry, not available Bad value Price: 1500
Who cares! The RGB obviously makes up for all of it. The extra speed and performance it gives you is well worth the burned up CPU and RAM. Who cares if your RAM burns up??? Just download more!!!
Yup my friend fell for that with the UK builders called PC specialist.. Ryzen 5 2400G Random B450 motherboard 8GB of Ram massive RGB case 1TB HDD 250gb SSD 600 watt power supply £500 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
Kyle: “If you’re on a budget then one of the things that should really matter about a case that you’re choosing is-“ Me: “Tempered Glass” Kyle: “...Airflow”
Between you, Jay, and Linus i was able to build my own pc for the first time last month. Thank you for constantly educating us normies. Ryzen 3700x, 16 gigs ddr4 3200 ram, AMD 5700 gpu, 600 watt 80+ bronze, and 1tb m.2. Learning how to do it myself from you guys saved me about $300-400 thanks again.😁
@@quantum_vortex_ its really good for 1080p ultra or 1440p high. Its by far the fastest pc I have ever owned and I havn't had any driver wierdness, plugged it all in and it worked.
@@zerodwarf9389 it works on most of them now. But why you bought an X570 for that even a B350 can run it fine. X570 need to be paired with at least 3700X
You also gotta remember that when building diy all the parts might not be in stock, also the shipping on every singular piece might also be super expensive
It really depends on where you're living and who are you buying that pc from. Here in romania you get a much better value from prebuilt pcs. We have an online store that is specialized on pcs and they give you the FULL specs of the prebuilt pc and they can even modify it for you a little bit if you want
I ordered my prebuilt from Dell as in the three weeks that I’ve been waiting for it I’ve been watching tons of tech videos and now I think it would cool to build my own RIP.
Lol I ordered a prebuilt from vrla tech. LLC and I think it was a good deal, got the "legacy" PC for a grand total of 850$. Has good specs, do u think it's a good buy
2018 bought my first prebuilt since 1995. Bought it so I did not have to read up on the newest parts. Upgraded power supply, dropped in a GTX 1060 3gb card, added 8 more gigs of memory for 16, and it plays everything I need.
When I see the thumbnail show one of my choice of case for my client, I know its going to be good. To be fair I save on stuff that doesn't directly affect FPS, legit business here.
Let me fix your comment: Reason to buy a pre-build: The stuff is ready done for you. No work needed You don't break any of the parts and have to pay for them again It is guaranteed to work. end Reasons Not to buy a pre-build The quality sucks Upgrades are just a dream at this point end
@Klip One it depends, i got a cyberpowerpc prebuilt with a ryzen 7 3700x (liquid cooled but unfortunately a 120mm radiator) and an rx 5700 xt for 1050$ They didnt cut as many corners (prob the power supply) because it had dual channel 3000 mhz ram and a b450 rebrand motherboard, which means it has OC support and m.2 Then again the initial price was 1300$ and you could get at least 3600 mhz ram for that price
Back when I bought my first prebuild, I was about fifteen, they had put in an insufficient PSU without me knowing. It burned my GPU. We went back, they replaced it. Three months later, burned again. That day however, my mom's best friend and a PC enthusiast was downstairs chillin'. I asked him what it could be (crying ofcourse, as I still believed it was my fault) so he went and checked. The minute he realized the PSU had nowhere near enough power to supply the CPU and GPU during games, he went back to the store with me. Now if I had to describe my mom's best friend, he looked closest to Butterbean; the big fat bald boxer. They gave me a GTX 960 off the shelf for free five minutes later, which was a 300 bucks card at the time. My mom's friend ended up paying for a new PSU to support it the same day. tl'dr : prebuild vendors will fuck you over, get a friend that's over 400lb's.
@@SubjectE57 when I was 12 I only could use a family laptop. It couldn't run anything stronger then minecraft at like 10 fps lol. The first thing I did when I got a job was get a pc lmao.
@@Epsilonsama aren't 2060's still pretty good? I know they're overpriced but it feels like it's gonna be as cheap as a good graphics card will ever get
I'm getting a redux PC, they're really good prebuilts and they on look y havea $75 build fee. You can see the exact parts in the PC btw, and you can customize it.
@@sanitygone-l9y strange did that change at some point I was taught to use either 1 and 2 or 3 and 4 but keep em together has that been proven less efficient
I would really love to see him go on like iBuypower or another system integrator website because on those websites you get to pick the parts and I think that would make a comparison like this great because you could use the same parts!
@JeremyCuddles If you find a deal like that go for it. I just bought a pc a few days ago and when cross checking (US prices) I found most components to cost more and there was less selection.
I literally just did that. I "customized" a pre-built on ibuypower. They had a great deal a bunch of free stuff and with rayzen 7 3800x and a 2070 super for 2000 and that's with military discount. Went on pcpartpicker and it was the same price not including the mouse and keyboard and other free stuff. Pcpartpicker is the way to go and always build on your own but if ibuypower has great deals going on i don't see why not.
The reason prebuilt PC’s sell so well is because of the fact that the majority of people buying a prebuilt are either parents that heard their kids say they wanted a gaming pc so they went to Best Buy and bought whatever price range they could afford, or people that don’t know much about computers either way do some research before you do anything and worse case hell buy the parts and pay someone to build it
I was going to build my own, but it was too intimidating, so I recently bought an iBuyPower prebuilt for $1249 -RTX 2060 Super -Ryzen 7 3700x -16 gb ddr4 3200 -asus prime b550 plus -600w psu 80+ gold -500 gb ssd & a 1tb hdd i added all the parts into pcpartpicker and got around the same price, so I think it was worth it. Wont know until it ships though.
Bro same, all though I wasn’t intimidated by the build it self, the demand for the RTX 3070 ruined that😂 So, I’m ordering a prebuilt with a 3600x with a 3070
It's funny at :17 when he is talking about really cheap "crappy" parts he shows an AsRock board... Then goes ahead and is sponsored by AsRock. Hahahahahahahahahaha
Well friend I happen to have the very motherboard he showed on the pic, and its cheap as hell (I only use it because my old PC needed a new board with a compatible socket for an i5 6400), it was cheap as hell back in 2014 - 2016 when it was released too, they are the low end boards that ASRock makes to address the budget market. They are not bad mind you, I currently run my VR PC headset with one and it performs very reliably but they are severely limited in features. Only 2 ram slots, no NVMe support, no overclock at all as the power delivery is as barebones as it gets and you only get a single PWM connection for a case fan so airflow on a prebuilt using it sucks unless the system integrator spends money on an extra fan controller.
Just built my first PC after watching a few of your videos. There were some discrepancies, but I'd wager they could easily be chalked up to us using different equipment. Thanks for the information and PC education.
"I'm really surprised Intel hasn't refreshed their stock coolers" I wish they would. I absolutely despise those plastic compression fit knobs. They're a pain to secure. I had one fail on me a few months ago because the white plastic that goes through the motherboard had become brittle with age.
They don't do well with a lot of re installations either. Those little white tabs break off very easily and each installation weakens them more until they finally break off.
I built my pc for MAXIMUM upgradability I did feel sad when I found out about the 1600 af but am happy that I could chuck in a 3950x in the distant future
A year ago: "build your own pc, its cheaper." 2021: people now buying prebuilds just for graphics cards and lack of other components because everything is inflated and its cheaper to buy a prebuilt than it is to build your own. Madness... Crazy times to be a pc builder.
I actually got a pretty good prebuilt. I knew it was a bad idea from the start, but I had people yelling at me saying I'm not good enough to build a PC myself, so I got one from Best Buy. It's actually great so far and I'm happy with it.
way cheaper here in thailand, the stores can import these at way less tax prices but to get any decent parts i have to pay at least 30% more than in the states
deez biscuits I would say either PB Tech, computerlounge, playtech or extremePC. They are what come to mind - but I’d still go with custom built. Better parts for the same price - a lot changes in 2 months.
Watching on my prebuilt (done a couple upgrades here and there) Case: CiT F3 (Green) Intel Pentium G645 @ 2.9GHz Intel DQ67SW Geforce GT 710 SL 2GB 8GB dual channel DDR3 500W PSU 1TB Toshiba SATA H.D.D. 3.5" (OG) + 320GB Toshiba SATA H.D.D. 2.5" (fitted by moi) A USB 3.0 PCIe x1 expansion card (fitted by moi) Faster and quieter case fans (came fitted with two noisy ones (1f + 1r) so I put two new ones in the front, one (soon to be upped again) in back, and one of the OG fans up top) fitted by moi. Building my own PC soon, will have RTX 2060 OC (Gigabyte) and Ryzen 5 3600 in a Kolink Citadel Mesh Edit: I may spend the extra money and buy a 2070 instead. It's like £80 more
So I'm one of the many who hadn't subscribed but watched quite a few vids (I'd been put off subscribing initially before now because of certain pejoratives and phrases that really shouldn't be in your active vocab and lexicon to be inclusive) but I am now subbed and going through the extensive back catalogue. I just wanna say kudos for mentioning and acknowledging those with disabilities who may not be in a position to make their own build. I find quite often techtubers often not only overlooking their TH-cam privilege (eg hey, money is a thing people need to buy nice things normally lol) but most of the time act like differently abled people don't exist. So kudos Bitwit for mentioning that 👍🏻 I'm physically disabled and for the longest time it was a completely invisible illness, and the struggle is REAL. Keep it up 👍🏻🤓
I found a prebuilt for $900 on sale for $618 and it says all of brands and names of the parts and it adds up to the same price if you were to buy the same parts on Amazon.
Some are alright for the money you pay if you can get them on offer. Again though, make sure they haven't cheaped out on components, especially the power supply. Across the board, prebuilts are often not as good value for money, or cut corners compared to if you choose components yourself.
You can get deals on their older builds sometimes, for sure. I just priced one out on cyberpower compared to partpicker, and it worked out with exactly the same around a 150 dollar difference, which imo is fair for labor costs.
Theres some retail suppliers who also build custom PCs. You can pick all the parts down to the cables colours, can also buy softwares from them. they build and test it and install and update everything and comes with 12 months store warranty on everything, so if say your cpu was defective after 6 months, bring back to store and they will diagnose and repair or replace or refund and deal with the manufacturer themselves. Charge is normally $100-150 depending on the build. So you know exactly what you get, professional advice on parts and build, professionally put together install and tested and full parts and labour warranty.
I hate when people add those tags saying "100+ fps" which is so blood boiling. Oh so this 300 dollar pc can run cyberpunk 2077 Max settings 8k over 100 fps? Yeah sounds about right.
I was about to have a PC custom built until I saw the price and then looked up how to build your own. This channel (Back when it was still Awesome Sauce) was one of the resources I used to help me figure out what to do. I built a PC that was better then what my dad bought for $3000 CND the year before... For about $2200 CND.
i feel so spoiled having a microcenter like ten mins from me. even their prebuilts are pretty solid and cheaper than what it would cost to build myself
i went with an SI this year to replace my aging FX8350, GTX 760 build finally after 8 years of solid performance. The SI I went with however allowed me to basically hand pick every single component in the box down to the wiring and while it was pricier than doing it myself by the tune of 200 or so bucks, I'm pleased with the quality of the box i got. Frankly only reason i went with the SI is...Laziness. I just didnt want to be bothered with piecing everything together myself :D
I like watching videos about pre builds, I'm planning on getting my first desktop PC soon. Very informative. Edit: I just built one not to long ago, this video helps a lot! PS: don't buy prebuilds
Wes Thompson asrock has fine components, the board used in that prebuilt is just the extreme low-end low-budget option, you’d expect a lot more out of a ‘gaming’ pc
I actually have a prebuilt by cyberpower with asrock b450 with the 2600 only real crap part was the power supply that costs less than the 720 one he showcased, obviously he went with the worst possible to make a point, he should have shown some decent ones for people who cant build also
I work in a computer repair shop, and on many of our mATX builds, we'll use both the Gigabyte B450M DS3H, and the Thermaltake H18. Both are fantastic components.
Like others have noticed, you need to factor in the cost of the Windows License, the DVD drive and the cost of a chassis with a drive bay for the DVD, to be an accurate/fair comparison. There is also a major cost you forgot - the cost of labor/time of the assembly, and testing that the SI does to build the system. Sometimes the SI may include some kind of service/warranty for a few months or a year on the pre-tested system. When you build yourself, you will have to do your own troubleshooting. The SIs unfortunately might be trying to mask these costs by cutting corners on some components of the system. Also, the more expensive system you were comparing against seemed to include a mouse and keyboard that you need to factor into the cost.
Nah, that ruins it when you add reality to "but you can build a better one for less". Quickly turns into "but I can get a gray market windows license for $9, I already have this dvd drive and old SSD over here, then I'm going to forget the case, the cables and the fact that when it breaks, YOU have to figure out why and deal with parts replacements. But dang I got some chokes on my motherboard that'd power an aircraft carrier!!1!
@@gerble36 A DVD drive is useful for installing old games and for watching DVDs. I use an external CD/DVD drive for running old games on VMs and watching old DVD box sets (I could just pirate stuff, especially if I already own a DVD copy, but having the DVD to hand is often a lot easier than finding a decent quality download that doesn't come with a ton of viruses).
Child of Shrek I wouldn’t. Imagine if you broke your friends cpu or something. I’d feel so bad. Besides it would take a while, so I’d rather be playing or doing hw
It’s funny the case used in the thumbnail was actually the case I used for my first build along with the Raidmax 500w power supply. Not necessarily proud of it 😂 but funny
My first serious PC was an ABS Super Stalker prebuilt. Came with an ASUS Z170-p motherboard, i7 6700k CPU, a Zalman Performa cpu cooler, 32 GB of Avexir 2166 hz RAM in four 8GB sticks, Zotac GTX 970, a 120GB sata ssd, a 1TB HDD, and a 750w PSU. It's lasted me a good 6 years now, and truth told probably could keep going. I spent ~$1600 USD on it and I was very happy. I've since beefed the GPU to a 1660 Ti, had both the original storage drives fail, as well as the optical disc drive, and the original PSU. If I could do it all over again I'm sure I would have spent that $1600 on components but hey, live and learn! I'm now working on a build for my fiance and plan to upgrade my own components soon, complete with a whole new case to put it all in!
Hope you found this informative! Not hating on all pre-builts btw. There are some good ones too (Corsair, NZXT, etc.). Btw links to the parts featured in my DIY list are in the description. :)
and don't forget to...
stay home, wash your hands, LIKE and SUBSCRIBE.
Bitwit The ram for the 870$ build its a g.skill aiges at 2400 or 3000 speed i have a kit at 2400 speed
0:20 i had this board and it wasnt a pre-build
I agree for current prices but I'd offer that there was a time during the Bitcoin phase where prebuilts were the only way to get graphics cards and RAM closest to MSRP. I decided to try one during that time (when my PC died) and have been slowly upgrading all the parts. Great video 👌
make a video of corona effect on tech youtubers or how u r dealing with it on daily basis
I have a skytech blaze II, it has a 2060 super, and a ryzen 7 2700x, it looks nothing like it does in the picture it shows 2 dim slots, mine has 4, 2x8gb or ram, it is really good
*Steal a man's wallet and you make him poor for day*
*Teach a man to build a PC and you make him poor for life*
Fail a man out of art school and he starts a gen....wait a minute
@@deadlybladesmith3093 a new generation of people that know how bad showers can be.
@@calebpulido3426 my german plumber accidentally hooked up the gas line to my shower.
I guess old habits *die* hard.....
@@deadlybladesmith3093 ,
That's NOT appropriate.
@@photonboy999 it's a joke man, lighten up
Kyle: looks at any PC
Also Kyle: *This needs a Ryzen 5 1600 AF*
6 cores is perfect! Ryzen 3600 is a beast and performs just as good as the 3700x. Maybe 3 FPS less..
@Klip One Most games only need 4 though.
@@jaronmarles941 most
The guy is bitching about 6 cores. My point is that 6 cores now is already enough. 8 is overkill atm.
@@jaronmarles941 Depends on what u are doing. But for Gaming 6 Cores are enough.
Nah everyone knows just to build your own components because the component makers have to make a profit
Just mine and purify your own silicon because the factories and miners need to make a profit
Nah just download more cpu gpu water cooling, ram, storage, etc
Nah dig your own mine because the people who opened the mine need to make profit on the mine
You have to make profit to create the universe
Lucid Streams just take over being god, the maker of the universe needs to make a profit
Just like prebuilt cars. That's why I build my own
kit car?
You can do that
@viperdemonz damn bro. Lost respect?
@viperdemonz cuz sometimes projects just don’t work out weirdo wtf
@John Jenkins 🤡
Good vid, using this to prove to my parents that I should be allowed to build my own pc
Building a pc now is easier than a hard lego set, no joke. Its a few screwdriver twists, and following 5 steps
I was able to build my first gaming pc by myself. I also got the ryzen 5 1600 af cpu and a rx 570 gpu :)
RectalDiscourse I am, that verge build will be an immortal meme in the pc building community
just gotta watch out for cable management lol
Why do your parents care not like they know anything about pc building
Me: "I got a $3500 budget which CPU should I get"
Kyle: Ryzen 5 1600 AF
Me : i9-9900k baby 😎
Me: R9 3950X.
@@californium-2526 Random other guy: Threadripper 3990X
I mean might as well spend the entire budget on the CPU. Atleast it's a nice box to look at.
But yes realisticly 3800X/9900K for gaming only and 3950X/3960X for content creation + other stuff.
AMD for PCIE 4.0! Me an AMD 3700x on a x570 ASUS board with 2 NVME 1tb drives. PCIE 4.0 allows more storage and is ready for next gen graphics card. I'm using 7 SATA ports in addition to the 2 NVME drives without any add-in card and still have room to grow. The AMD 3800X does not give much of a boost in performance over the 3700X for the increased price unless you can find it on sale. The AMD platform also gives a superior CPU upgrade path over Intel which is constantly changing their socket design. No I'm not am AMD fanboy; in fact this was my first AMD build and I used Intel prior.
Californium-252 chad gamer move
Every Prebuilt Ever:
Graphics Card: RTX 2080 Ti
PSU: Corsair HX 1200
Cooling: NXZT Kraken X72
Cpu: Intel Core i3 5157U
Or:
GPU: GT 710 1GB
Mobo: (A320 with 2 DIMM slots)
CPU: R9 3950X
Cooler: (50W Cooler)
RAM: 1x8gb CL19 DDR4 - 2133mhz
My prebuilt is customized
Nvidia GeForce 1660 super
Intel Core i7
And some fan cooling I don’t know what it is
That's is one hell of a bottleneck system.
I feel like I see the 1060 or 1660 everywhere
Exaction Dis_patch because that’s in most people’s budgets which is like $700 so like entry to the mid range
Now do the reverse of this. Build a computer with the exact specs of the pre built, but for the cheapest you can.
most of the time pre builts are cheaper but for that price you can do better
You can't. Because you don't know the ram speed.
@@EarthIsFlat456 Well not like ram speed matters too much for price, and even if it did you can test it or go into system info.
@@mrpotat680 You did say "exact specs".
@@EarthIsFlat456 you did say "you can't" even though you can.
my friend made fun of me for playing console. i found out he has a prebuilt. i now make fun of him for not building his own like i did recently.
Lol
@@zirx8233 did you even read the last sentence?
How the turntables
@@alangarza332 Can confirm, the tables were turned!
Damn power move.
Kyle: r u running a 1600AF?
me: no why
Kyle: be a lot cooler if u did
Are you using the Corsair A500? Be alot cooler if you did.
I bought 2600 like 9 months before 1600 af released maybe those guys also build pc's before 1600 af is released.
I wonder if Kyle blames me for not using time machine to buy 1600 af instead of 2600
I got one for my server PC and I am happy with it lol
@@yokboylebiri6986 i don't think he's trying to. he's speaking of the current time we are in, not what you should have done 9 months ago
for the price and performance, no other chip beats it so Kyle's praise is valid imho.
why didnt this video exist 2 years ago when i bought this exact dumb pc
Isn't it pretty obvious? Look up the parts on the web and it becomes clear that it's a rip off...
@@Hecci1006 people who arent tech savvy, teens who just want a computer and dont know what their buying, parents/grandparents who dont know anything about computers, they all can easily fall for these because "TVs, game consoles, phones all come prebuilt as well"
We arent born knowing things, we are taught either directly or by assumption, what is "obvious" for you isnt for someone who doesn't know anything about computers
@@Reinreith well said, and that goes for most things
its funny I built mine and ended up with that case in the thumbnail, dont ask why I picked it. idk i think it was a budget thing at the time.. I planned on changing the case when I upgraded so idk LOL
@Doctor Squidman You are the only person I know who researches every single thing that you buy.
I feel like I joined an elite club when I built my first PC a few weeks ago. Having a computer this nice is a real dream come true for me, and though I spent a lot on it, I'm so glad I got a good value for it. I went to a website where they listed the components for a pc build and put in Amazon links so I could add it all to my cart and upgrade anything I felt like splurging more on, like the SSD and the ram. It's also nice to know exactly what is in my computer.
I just built my first ever PC yesterday.
Worse experience of my life.
It took me 10-12 hours to figurd that shit out.
All the screws the wires the connectors.
I learned a lot but fuck.
If you felt like you belong to an elite club. I felt like I was conned into thinking how enjoyable and easy it would be lol
@@halcyonramirez6469 Yeah, whoever told you that it would be easy definitely lied. It's extremely complicated. My cables are still kinda ugly in there.
Splurging on the ssd? I hope you splurge on storage capacity instead of going "higher" tier ssd (as even m.2 have various prices).
@@Crustee0 Yes, that's what I meant. I got a similar ssd to the one listed on the website but with 1 tb rather than 500 gb.
@Daniel Vipin You're probably way smarter than I am then. By a lot.
In where I live pre builts are cheaper (every part is listed so I know what I'm buying), than getting all the parts and building it myself. My country is weird
Damn which country are you living in
Buy the pre-builts, take out the parts and resell the parts for a profit then?
What country
@@duderock10111 i was going to comment this. like TF kid start a business then
Where you live boy?
we should require all low end power supply’s to come with a included fire extinguisher
Some of the same low end power supply is basically the same power supply that you are using, with a different reputable sticker. GN Greatwall PSU example.
A fire extinguisher cost around the same as a power supply, sooo
@@AlfaPro1337 well that is why you see reviews mate and don't recommend any PSU that is not 80+ rated
Like Austin evans
I've been using a $50 power supply for 4 years no issues , meanwhile my corsair mx550 shuts off every 2 days and its only 6 months old
I understand that some are intimidated in building their own pc. I consider myself as non-tech savy, but I've already built 2 systems/rigs and it's a really cool experience, its not very hard. You get to choose your own parts, how powerful you want it to be, taking in consideration your budget. I highly recommend it!
Its easier than building legos
To be fair, switching between the power supply manual and the motherboard manual my first time was very overwhelming! But still, it is fun
@@ShinGidora The part that took the longest for me was making sure I got the wirings for the front IO right, the rest of the build was pretty much a breeze. Well, the cable management took some time as well.
Waldran1995 same here!! Liquid cooling and figuring out the intake/exhaust direction of the fans also added to the time 😅 next time should be smoother
I got a pre built back in 2014. With the parts it had, that pre built was cheaper than buying all parts seperately. It was GTX 760 paired with an i5-4570 and 8GB of RAM along with a 1TB drive. Paid 750 euros for it. The card alone was 300 euros back in the day, as for the CPU it was probably 250€ but I don't remember too well. The only thing that concerned me was the cheap power supply from an unknown brand but it ended up lasting 6 years. Since then I have changed all parts individually at one point. I would say for the first time, it's okay to get a pre built as long as you understand the specs and value they offer so you don't get scammed. After that, just buy the hardware you need.
Me who bought a pre-built and knows nothing about pc's:
I like your funny words magic man
You should try to understand what he's saying.
It's honestly important if you don't want your pc to spontaneously combust
@@souldjahfromdanarf6059 Not all prebuilts are bad.
@@trevorrovert3103 some, I can list about 3 that I know of that are not bad. Nzxt prebuilts, cyberpower, and finally, some Asus prebuilts. Bash me if you want, that's just what I've found.
lol same i got a prebuiltand i dont really care if its is bad or good i would be fine with running my favorite games
@@radicalvevo yeah lol same, it's only been until recently that I've actually tried learning about computers
well i have seen awful prebuilts
such as the "10 core" "gaming pc", and very vague specs such as
intel i5, 8 gigabytes ram, 1tb storage, nvidia gpu
Nvidia GPU lmao
Nvidia gpus are cool and all unlesd they aren't gtx 1660 or 1650 or outdated but yeah prebuilds suck
aholes say i5 then gives a gen1 i5.a gen1!
Some SIs sell systems with unspecified DDR3 RAM. That's by far the worst.
@@CSEabdulalimkhan a first generation i5 is still a i5 but my i3 8100 outperforms every non k i5 from before 6th gen since 7th gen i5s actually somewhat outperform the i3 8100
Me: *watching Kyle rip apart a prebuilt*
Me: "Who would buy that?"
Me: *Realizes my old pc has the same case*
lol yea i was selling a pc with an old case this dude ripped apart
Video: 1060 is an entry level card.
Me : Laughs in Intel HD
Lol
Me: *nervously laughing in MSI GTX 970 OC edition*
@@jynxcloudy6969 Me nervously laughing in gtx 1660
@@ThiccNicc_ im going this card soon . what are your thoughts on it
@@marus2249 Decent for 1080p gaming but if you want to up some frames in 1080p for later then gtx 1660 ti is the way to go
Kyle this is a very useful and informative video for 1st timers. I have never bought an off-the-shelf PC. My current PC is a self-build, but my previous 3 were custom builds by a company in the UK called PC Specialist. They work similar to a parts pickers and then they build your PC to your spec, you probably have a myriad of companies in the US who do the same thing. I found this very helpful as, until now, I wasn't very confident in building a PC myself.
“They’re really noisy under load and just aren’t that great performers.”
That is in fact what she said.
Lmao
If the stress of her load is causing poor performance, maybe what's needed is something said _to_ her... 😅
Well then, just bought an omen 30l a few days ago, then later I learned that the price went down $200, and also find this vid
That hit harder than my mom's belt
At least you have a good PC!
Send it back
Do a return and buy it again, or tell them that you want the sale price or you'll just do a full return...
Oof size: *large*
Prebuilt in a nut shell
Power supply: Super-X “600” watt power supply
CPU: ryzen 5 1600
Gpu 4gb gtx 1660
Mother board: found in the trash can
Ram: one 8gb stick from oollooy brand
Case: Lots of rgb
500gb hdd: from the bin
Ssd: *Sorry, not available
Bad value
Price: 1500
Pretty much 😂
Legit last night my friend was showing me prebuilts he was looking at and it was like, 750 bucks for a dual core system with no ssd lmao
a hahhaa 1 stick
Who cares! The RGB obviously makes up for all of it. The extra speed and performance it gives you is well worth the burned up CPU and RAM. Who cares if your RAM burns up??? Just download more!!!
Yup my friend fell for that with the UK builders called PC specialist..
Ryzen 5 2400G
Random B450 motherboard
8GB of Ram
massive RGB case
1TB HDD
250gb SSD
600 watt power supply
£500
🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️
I just purchased a prebuilt from Best Buy, 10 minutes later I’m looking up why you SHOULDNT buy a prebuilt pc because I’m a masochist
dude same
I just ordered a prebuilt and this pops up I’m my recommended
Tough
F
F
Don’t worry the parts he says can be cheap are the parts that are the cheapest on the whole pc so u can just re order better parts and put them on
You’ll be fine just replace the parts when you can
Im still rocking a GT 730
Yes, you read that correctly
GT not GTX
I thought my gtx 750ti was bad....
Man I’m rockin the gt710 get a buttery smooth 10 frames on everything
@capnsoviet yt are you using a nasa pc
Cause I get 0 fps
Im rocking my Intel HD 530
Im rocking a core 2 duo e5400 and 2gb of ddr2 without a gpu
Kyle: “If you’re on a budget then one of the things that should really matter about a case that you’re choosing is-“
Me: “Tempered Glass”
Kyle: “...Airflow”
same lmao
bro i legit laughed my ass off lmaoo
Rgb
The more RBG you have the more frames you get and the more powerful your computer is.
@@VertesaGaming oh ok thx bro
These pre-builts suck, not because of the value, but because they don't have a Ryzen 5 1600 AF.
Cept for that same cpu about 2 months after this video is now 230+$
actually.... the original R5 1600 is 3.4 GHz while the AF one is 3.2GHz. This system actually uses the AF version. Idk why he didn't notice that.
@Kenn Honson X it does,but not that much
@@mike0373 there is a lot more to CPUs than just clock speed. But yeah, it is still important
Between you, Jay, and Linus i was able to build my own pc for the first time last month. Thank you for constantly educating us normies.
Ryzen 3700x, 16 gigs ddr4 3200 ram, AMD 5700 gpu, 600 watt 80+ bronze, and 1tb m.2.
Learning how to do it myself from you guys saved me about $300-400 thanks again.😁
Rorick Jager dats a rly niice rig man, which cooler did u use?
Nice but quick question why didn’t you get 3600 ram
How is that GPU cpu combo going?
@@quantum_vortex_ its really good for 1080p ultra or 1440p high. Its by far the fastest pc I have ever owned and I havn't had any driver wierdness, plugged it all in and it worked.
@@vijayaseenivasan7842 scythe mugen 120 mm air
making Lyle angry , starter pack
: using a processor other that a ryzen 5 1600 AF
: using ram slower than 3600 mhz.
Okay?
There me who bought a 2600 because 1600af doesn't work on x570
Don't forget 'ketchup and mustard'
@@zerodwarf9389 it works on most of them now. But why you bought an X570 for that even a B350 can run it fine. X570 need to be paired with at least 3700X
@CrispinSauce mobo was on sale got it for the same price as a tomahawk max
That moment when everyone recommends the R5 1600af and forces they price up to $140
Thought about getting a 1600 then saw it was the same price as the 2600, literally no reason to buy that first gen cpu now. 155$...
get an i7 4790k
@@aalidas8951 buying an older used CPU is really fucking stupid.
@@aalidas8951 that CPU is really bad in 2020
@@jerenceaviado7367 actually if the cpu had alot of cores and good clock speed it can perform good
You also gotta remember that when building diy all the parts might not be in stock, also the shipping on every singular piece might also be super expensive
use honey or karma and you might get a discount code that will lower the cost
"What's under that power supply shroud? Hopefully a fire extinguisher" LOL, thanks for the laughs!
18:07 I imagine they purchase tray processors, another way to save costs
Edit - English
Friend : "You should buy prebuilt PC."
Me : "..."
Heri Yanto relatable
It really depends on where you're living and who are you buying that pc from. Here in romania you get a much better value from prebuilt pcs. We have an online store that is specialized on pcs and they give you the FULL specs of the prebuilt pc and they can even modify it for you a little bit if you want
REDCAT uff whats the website?
@@jarrettembry643 Not everybody has the resources/ time to build a gaming pc
@@mmuhee151 im talking about pc garage
"best in class build quality" as the camera zooms in on a crooked capacitor 1:03
I've owned my pc for about 3 years now and I've never activated windows.
I activated windows for $3 on eBay.
I did it for free lol
@@ScorpioXD6969 how tf
i think you can use windows 7/8 keys for windows 10
Linux?
I ordered my prebuilt from Dell as in the three weeks that I’ve been waiting for it I’ve been watching tons of tech videos and now I think it would cool to build my own RIP.
Lol I ordered a prebuilt from vrla tech. LLC and I think it was a good deal, got the "legacy" PC for a grand total of 850$. Has good specs, do u think it's a good buy
same bro, i wish i knew about buliding my own computer before buying a prebuilt. But we all learn from our mistakes
FTL Sins I mean my Alienware Aurora is running fine, even after a year
AncientPiggyBike is it upgradeable though?
Ryan D Don’t think so
"gtx 1660 is very much a entry-level card"
cries in gt 730
Honestly just get an APU at that point
Buy a new card used, I just got a 1070 for $200
You should upgrade to a 750 If your on a tight budget but if you have 50$ more you could get an Rx 580 for around 100$ on eBay
cries in gtx 1050 ti
@@nerfnstrike1212 You can literally get a used gtx 1060 for 130 bucks.
2018 bought my first prebuilt since 1995. Bought it so I did not have to read up on the newest parts. Upgraded power supply, dropped in a GTX 1060 3gb card, added 8 more gigs of memory for 16, and it plays everything I need.
When I see the thumbnail show one of my choice of case for my client, I know its going to be good.
To be fair I save on stuff that doesn't directly affect FPS, legit business here.
As example?
Yep, I have that exact case now 😂 it gets there job done. The back panel sucks though!
17:07 “what else is under this power supply shroud, probably a fire extinguisher”. Well the same can be said for any raidmax PSU lol
until you realize raidmax actually did an 80+ titanium Andyson made unit that was decent enough...
Reason to buy a pre-build:
end
The only reason to buy prebuild is if its cheaper than what you can build yourself
Let me fix your comment:
Reason to buy a pre-build:
The stuff is ready done for you. No work needed
You don't break any of the parts and have to pay for them again
It is guaranteed to work.
end
Reasons Not to buy a pre-build
The quality sucks
Upgrades are just a dream at this point
end
@Klip One it depends, i got a cyberpowerpc prebuilt with a ryzen 7 3700x (liquid cooled but unfortunately a 120mm radiator) and an rx 5700 xt for 1050$
They didnt cut as many corners (prob the power supply) because it had dual channel 3000 mhz ram and a b450 rebrand motherboard, which means it has OC support and m.2
Then again the initial price was 1300$ and you could get at least 3600 mhz ram for that price
Don't know anything about computers and just need a PC to run your TH-cam and email.
Sam Hyper fax you also can’t customize it as much as if you were to build
Back when I bought my first prebuild, I was about fifteen, they had put in an insufficient PSU without me knowing.
It burned my GPU. We went back, they replaced it. Three months later, burned again.
That day however, my mom's best friend and a PC enthusiast was downstairs chillin'.
I asked him what it could be (crying ofcourse, as I still believed it was my fault) so he went and checked.
The minute he realized the PSU had nowhere near enough power to supply the CPU and GPU during games, he went back to the store with me.
Now if I had to describe my mom's best friend, he looked closest to Butterbean; the big fat bald boxer.
They gave me a GTX 960 off the shelf for free five minutes later, which was a 300 bucks card at the time. My mom's friend ended up paying for a new PSU to support it the same day.
tl'dr : prebuild vendors will fuck you over, get a friend that's over 400lb's.
I just upgraded my Dell Inspiron 15 laptop from 2 gigs of ram to 4!
It now can open 3 tabs of Chrome!
I need a new laptop lol
or get a desktop
I got a prebuild when I was 12, now it’s upgraded and better so I’m pretty proud
When I was 12 we just had one crappy computer for the whole family in the living room... At least I had red alert 2.
@@SubjectE57 when I was 12 I only could use a family laptop. It couldn't run anything stronger then minecraft at like 10 fps lol.
The first thing I did when I got a job was get a pc lmao.
@@DrBhil-oc5yg I am thinking of doing the same thing when i get a job, i had a shitty all in one pc growing up that could not run league.
I've owned my pc for about 3 years now and I've never activated windows.
1:58 Why do I feel like Lyle is about to take over?
I love how everyone says that 8gb of ram is the minimum, and im here with 4gb
I have 3?
i have 8gb ddr3 yall are lucky
Lol I have 16 Gn DDR4 corsair
now i upgraded from 1x4gb ddr3 400ghz to 2x8gb ddr4 3200mhz
and a whole new pc
@@RDani223 gg nice
19:20
Kyle: "a DIY PC will give you..."
*DIYPC has entered the chat*
18:09 they used that cooler because when they order the CPUs in bulk, they don’t get the wraith coolers.
me, watching this on my prebuilt:
nice
I'm watching this on a prebuilt laptop.
aha same
@@CaveyMoth shoulda made your own laptop smh
Even when I was young I wanted a custom built but my parents got a pre built with some weird mother board
@@SolidGreenDay did you seriously get prebuilt components? Ugh 🤦♂️, you should’ve carved the metal and melted the silicon yourself 😒😒😒
This is making me wanna build my own pc. Im currently saving up for the parts.
Same I'm saving up for Christmas 2021
@@alex_156 scratch 2021, with the GPU shortage you gotta wait for 2022.
@@Epsilonsama aren't 2060's still pretty good? I know they're overpriced but it feels like it's gonna be as cheap as a good graphics card will ever get
I'm getting a redux PC, they're really good prebuilts and they on look y havea $75 build fee. You can see the exact parts in the PC btw, and you can customize it.
18:20 the ram stick isn’t even in the second slot, it’s in the forth slot
I don’t see it there? And usually with putting your ram chips in, the best slots to put in your ram sticks is in slots 2 and 4 or 1 and 3
@@sanitygone-l9y strange did that change at some point I was taught to use either 1 and 2 or 3 and 4 but keep em together has that been proven less efficient
I would really love to see him go on like iBuypower or another system integrator website because on those websites you get to pick the parts and I think that would make a comparison like this great because you could use the same parts!
All that your gonna see is every part costs 20-30% more.
@JeremyCuddles If you find a deal like that go for it. I just bought a pc a few days ago and when cross checking (US prices) I found most components to cost more and there was less selection.
I literally just did that. I "customized" a pre-built on ibuypower. They had a great deal a bunch of free stuff and with rayzen 7 3800x and a 2070 super for 2000 and that's with military discount. Went on pcpartpicker and it was the same price not including the mouse and keyboard and other free stuff. Pcpartpicker is the way to go and always build on your own but if ibuypower has great deals going on i don't see why not.
@@TheBUGZNTA I'm willing to pay more for convenience I really dont care lol
The reason prebuilt PC’s sell so well is because of the fact that the majority of people buying a prebuilt are either parents that heard their kids say they wanted a gaming pc so they went to Best Buy and bought whatever price range they could afford, or people that don’t know much about computers either way do some research before you do anything and worse case hell buy the parts and pay someone to build it
Some don't know how to build one and are too afraid to try, like me, so they just buy a pre-built
Dicky Wanks that’s too bad. I think you’d actually like it once you try. Can’t even describe how nervous I was on my first build
imStrongPlayz what if something goes wrong? 😭 $3000 down the drain
ファイサルFaisal dude watch youtube build. Such as bitwits full guide
@@Notsvltvui bruh i just built mine today it was easy tbh
I was going to build my own, but it was too intimidating, so I recently bought an iBuyPower prebuilt for $1249
-RTX 2060 Super
-Ryzen 7 3700x
-16 gb ddr4 3200
-asus prime b550 plus
-600w psu 80+ gold
-500 gb ssd & a 1tb hdd
i added all the parts into pcpartpicker and got around the same price, so I think it was worth it. Wont know until it ships though.
;/
Bro same, all though I wasn’t intimidated by the build it self, the demand for the RTX 3070 ruined that😂 So, I’m ordering a prebuilt with a 3600x with a 3070
It is actually pretty solid for $1250.
It's funny at :17 when he is talking about really cheap "crappy" parts he shows an AsRock board... Then goes ahead and is sponsored by AsRock. Hahahahahahahahahaha
Thomas Moran Allmost all very low end mb no matter the brand are pure trash.
Robert Alex yeah, but he was doing a sponsorship
asRock makes good and bad boards, just like any other company...
@15:17
Well friend I happen to have the very motherboard he showed on the pic, and its cheap as hell (I only use it because my old PC needed a new board with a compatible socket for an i5 6400), it was cheap as hell back in 2014 - 2016 when it was released too, they are the low end boards that ASRock makes to address the budget market. They are not bad mind you, I currently run my VR PC headset with one and it performs very reliably but they are severely limited in features. Only 2 ram slots, no NVMe support, no overclock at all as the power delivery is as barebones as it gets and you only get a single PWM connection for a case fan so airflow on a prebuilt using it sucks unless the system integrator spends money on an extra fan controller.
I wished he had a PC Part's list set up for this so I can copy and paste it. And change a couple of parts.
**sees the 2060 for 300$** rip the gpus
Just built my first PC after watching a few of your videos. There were some discrepancies, but I'd wager they could easily be chalked up to us using different equipment. Thanks for the information and PC education.
Intel stock coolers be like: *jet engine noises and 96°*
@my pfp is awesome sauce it's a g4560 what do u expect
"I'm really surprised Intel hasn't refreshed their stock coolers"
I wish they would. I absolutely despise those plastic compression fit knobs. They're a pain to secure. I had one fail on me a few months ago because the white plastic that goes through the motherboard had become brittle with age.
They don't do well with a lot of re installations either.
Those little white tabs break off very easily and each installation weakens them more until they finally break off.
I built my pc for MAXIMUM upgradability I did feel sad when I found out about the 1600 af but am happy that I could chuck in a 3950x in the distant future
A year ago: "build your own pc, its cheaper."
2021: people now buying prebuilds just for graphics cards and lack of other components because everything is inflated and its cheaper to buy a prebuilt than it is to build your own. Madness...
Crazy times to be a pc builder.
IKR!
“prebuilt pc’s suck!”
Me, looking at my ibuypower pc: don’t worry, he was wasn’t talking to you.
edit: wow I never expected so many likes.
so ibuypowers are good?
@Diz Ψ "it has a core i9"
"cpu: Ryzen Threadripper"
lol
@Diz Ψ your motherboard has an intel socket and even then a core i9 wouldn't fit in it
@@raeedibnzaman1 he's prolly just lying and doesn't know anything about pcs in general
Diz Ψ “threadtipper” ? Learn how to spell and then lie
"we can install our os and some games and have plenty of headroom left" cod warzone: o i dont think so boyyy
I actually got a pretty good prebuilt. I knew it was a bad idea from the start, but I had people yelling at me saying I'm not good enough to build a PC myself, so I got one from Best Buy. It's actually great so far and I'm happy with it.
No you didn't
That cyberpower one that was throughout the intro was almost the exact same one that I bought before learning how to build PCs.
Re: the versa H18 there's plenty of space behind the motherboard and cable management is really easy
In New Zealand, it's actually cheaper to buy pre-builts, likely due to shipping issues.
Depends where you buy it - when I was looking (before custom building) PB Tech seemed to push the price a little bit
way cheaper here in thailand, the stores can import these at way less tax prices but to get any decent parts i have to pay at least 30% more than in the states
Do you know of any good places to buy prebuilt pc's from in NZ?
deez biscuits I would say either PB Tech, computerlounge, playtech or extremePC. They are what come to mind - but I’d still go with custom built. Better parts for the same price - a lot changes in 2 months.
When I add up everything I put into my PC it comes up over $1,000. My PC is no $1,000 PC though.
Third party parts?
When in doubt gigabyte it out.
Watching on my prebuilt (done a couple upgrades here and there)
Case: CiT F3 (Green)
Intel Pentium G645 @ 2.9GHz
Intel DQ67SW
Geforce GT 710 SL 2GB
8GB dual channel DDR3
500W PSU
1TB Toshiba SATA H.D.D. 3.5" (OG) + 320GB Toshiba SATA H.D.D. 2.5" (fitted by moi)
A USB 3.0 PCIe x1 expansion card (fitted by moi)
Faster and quieter case fans (came fitted with two noisy ones (1f + 1r) so I put two new ones in the front, one (soon to be upped again) in back, and one of the OG fans up top) fitted by moi.
Building my own PC soon, will have RTX 2060 OC (Gigabyte) and Ryzen 5 3600 in a Kolink Citadel Mesh
Edit: I may spend the extra money and buy a 2070 instead. It's like £80 more
Just wait the 3000 and the ryzen 4000
Laughs in rx580
I hope you waited, the 3000 are out and Rdna 2 soon too
This is exactly why I'm building my own for Christmas
same :)
I'm working and getting the parts for my birthday and Christmas for a $1100 build.
"This chip is the bees knees"...... hmm that sounded like lyle, something fishy is going on here.......
1:58 he turned into Lyle there for a second😂😂
So I'm one of the many who hadn't subscribed but watched quite a few vids (I'd been put off subscribing initially before now because of certain pejoratives and phrases that really shouldn't be in your active vocab and lexicon to be inclusive) but I am now subbed and going through the extensive back catalogue. I just wanna say kudos for mentioning and acknowledging those with disabilities who may not be in a position to make their own build. I find quite often techtubers often not only overlooking their TH-cam privilege (eg hey, money is a thing people need to buy nice things normally lol) but most of the time act like differently abled people don't exist. So kudos Bitwit for mentioning that 👍🏻 I'm physically disabled and for the longest time it was a completely invisible illness, and the struggle is REAL. Keep it up 👍🏻🤓
I’d honestly have any computer 🥺
@@copycatz1361 can I borrow $50 (no interest)
Just get a job
Boyo theyre probably under 14
@@EverythingZen01 nobody is hiring because a pandemic and recession exists
I found a prebuilt for $900 on sale for $618 and it says all of brands and names of the parts and it adds up to the same price if you were to buy the same parts on Amazon.
Some are alright for the money you pay if you can get them on offer. Again though, make sure they haven't cheaped out on components, especially the power supply. Across the board, prebuilts are often not as good value for money, or cut corners compared to if you choose components yourself.
You can get deals on their older builds sometimes, for sure.
I just priced one out on cyberpower compared to partpicker, and it worked out with exactly the same around a 150 dollar difference, which imo is fair for labor costs.
Theres some retail suppliers who also build custom PCs. You can pick all the parts down to the cables colours, can also buy softwares from them. they build and test it and install and update everything and comes with 12 months store warranty on everything, so if say your cpu was defective after 6 months, bring back to store and they will diagnose and repair or replace or refund and deal with the manufacturer themselves. Charge is normally $100-150 depending on the build. So you know exactly what you get, professional advice on parts and build, professionally put together install and tested and full parts and labour warranty.
Win 7 keys work on Win 10 installs for those that have them.
I hate when people add those tags saying "100+ fps" which is so blood boiling.
Oh so this 300 dollar pc can run cyberpunk 2077 Max settings 8k over 100 fps? Yeah sounds about right.
I know absolutely ridiculous. People really think they run all games the same
0:19 "Using really cheap parts where possible" Shows an ASRock Mobo. This video is brought to you by ASRock. Ha! Hahaha.
E Higgins what is wrong with asrock ?
@@domi7007 I didn't say there was anything wrong with ASRock
I was about to have a PC custom built until I saw the price and then looked up how to build your own. This channel (Back when it was still Awesome Sauce) was one of the resources I used to help me figure out what to do.
I built a PC that was better then what my dad bought for $3000 CND the year before... For about $2200 CND.
"designed for gamer"
i feel so spoiled having a microcenter like ten mins from me. even their prebuilts are pretty solid and cheaper than what it would cost to build myself
Nun Ya shame you can’t visit anymore anyway
@@TheDeathOrange wdym? I went today lol
the computer sitting on my desk is the thumbnail -_-
i went with an SI this year to replace my aging FX8350, GTX 760 build finally after 8 years of solid performance. The SI I went with however allowed me to basically hand pick every single component in the box down to the wiring and while it was pricier than doing it myself by the tune of 200 or so bucks, I'm pleased with the quality of the box i got. Frankly only reason i went with the SI is...Laziness. I just didnt want to be bothered with piecing everything together myself :D
I like watching videos about pre builds, I'm planning on getting my first desktop PC soon. Very informative.
Edit: I just built one not to long ago, this video helps a lot!
PS: don't buy prebuilds
^^ ignorant. Both my ibuypowers are fantastic and equaled out in cost. "Buy good pre-builts"
INTEL CORE X?!
damn I'm living under a rock
When did that come out
Talks about SI's using cheap parts then have an advert for ASRock.
Asrock is good.
Wes Thompson asrock has fine components, the board used in that prebuilt is just the extreme low-end low-budget option, you’d expect a lot more out of a ‘gaming’ pc
I actually have a prebuilt by cyberpower with asrock b450 with the 2600 only real crap part was the power supply that costs less than the 720 one he showcased, obviously he went with the worst possible to make a point, he should have shown some decent ones for people who cant build also
Hey asrock is a good brand
Dont diss on my man asrock or I'll send my homies at you
-Asrock Gang
I work in a computer repair shop, and on many of our mATX builds, we'll use both the Gigabyte B450M DS3H, and the Thermaltake H18. Both are fantastic components.
2:57 I remember the times when M.2 slots not even PCI ones were only featured in 250$+ boards. How fast tech evolves.
I found some for 90$ easily, I'm glad tech is evolving. It means I can buy a mid PC for less than a prebuilt
Like others have noticed, you need to factor in the cost of the Windows License, the DVD drive and the cost of a chassis with a drive bay for the DVD, to be an accurate/fair comparison. There is also a major cost you forgot - the cost of labor/time of the assembly, and testing that the SI does to build the system. Sometimes the SI may include some kind of service/warranty for a few months or a year on the pre-tested system. When you build yourself, you will have to do your own troubleshooting. The SIs unfortunately might be trying to mask these costs by cutting corners on some components of the system. Also, the more expensive system you were comparing against seemed to include a mouse and keyboard that you need to factor into the cost.
You can buy windows on a USB stick these days. So you wouldn't actually need a DvD drive.
Nah, that ruins it when you add reality to "but you can build a better one for less". Quickly turns into "but I can get a gray market windows license for $9, I already have this dvd drive and old SSD over here, then I'm going to forget the case, the cables and the fact that when it breaks, YOU have to figure out why and deal with parts replacements.
But dang I got some chokes on my motherboard that'd power an aircraft carrier!!1!
@@gerble36 A DVD drive is useful for installing old games and for watching DVDs. I use an external CD/DVD drive for running old games on VMs and watching old DVD box sets (I could just pirate stuff, especially if I already own a DVD copy, but having the DVD to hand is often a lot easier than finding a decent quality download that doesn't come with a ton of viruses).
DVD drive, mad Boomer over here.
@@awilke86 Use mine all the time.
I’d reccomend using something such as micro soft builder.
Essentially you choose the parts and pay them like 150$ to pay them
I would build peoples PCs for free
Child of Shrek
I wouldn’t. Imagine if you broke your friends cpu or something. I’d feel so bad. Besides it would take a while, so I’d rather be playing or doing hw
Lol, I checked and I was one of those who weren't subscribed, yet I've already seen several videos from you.
I'm subbed now :)
It’s funny the case used in the thumbnail was actually the case I used for my first build along with the Raidmax 500w power supply. Not necessarily proud of it 😂 but funny
I'd rather by a pre-built than do a DIY if I was Stefan Entienne.
The Hollanesian verge guy right?
@@tanishqbhaiji103 Yes.
"Designed for gamer" that's funny
just for one. Nor for any gamer in general, and not to be used by multiple people. It's not for gamers, it's for gamer!
My first serious PC was an ABS Super Stalker prebuilt. Came with an ASUS Z170-p motherboard, i7 6700k CPU, a Zalman Performa cpu cooler, 32 GB of Avexir 2166 hz RAM in four 8GB sticks, Zotac GTX 970, a 120GB sata ssd, a 1TB HDD, and a 750w PSU. It's lasted me a good 6 years now, and truth told probably could keep going. I spent ~$1600 USD on it and I was very happy. I've since beefed the GPU to a 1660 Ti, had both the original storage drives fail, as well as the optical disc drive, and the original PSU. If I could do it all over again I'm sure I would have spent that $1600 on components but hey, live and learn! I'm now working on a build for my fiance and plan to upgrade my own components soon, complete with a whole new case to put it all in!