Gamers Nexus: "In March 2012's budget gaming PC build, we put together a powerful, elegant, yet cheap system which will aid you budget gamers in your quest to conquer the cyber world. Our previous build was built for those with a bit more cash, so if you have around $900 to spend, check this one out."
Available right now on Xbox, PlayStation, Switch and PC is the latest from a prolific KEMCO team - Horrific Xanatorium; a horror Visual Novel
"The Singapore-based indie games publisher Spiral Up Games and Qingdao/Shandong-based (China) indie games developer Aluba Studio, today announced with great happiness and excitement that their hacking adventure "Cyber Manhunt 2: New World" is coming to PC via Steam EA on May 10th, 2024." - Jonas Ek, TGG.
"The Berlin-based (Germany) indie games developer Tarock Interactive today announced with great delight and happiness that their open-world survival/crafting game "Lost Legions", is now currenly in development for PC." - Jonas Ek, TGG.
Damn, nice work. I'll admit they tempted me to make my own PC following their work. My family and I need a second gaming PC for the den.
Comeback? Lol they nvr went anywhere and aren't going to
Bulldozer is a piece of shit.
$550.00?? My god PC gaming is Dam expensive
I totally understand the need for budget computers for gaming and other uses but honestly, after building many computers for myself and friends and family, I find that for gaming a budget computer is not a long term solution. Sure, you can build a system that will play everything today, maybe even on high graphic settings, but when the next batch of video cards, processors, operating systems, etc come out and games and programs move on to the capabilities of the newer parts and software, the old configurations fall farther and farther behind. I have built many systems trying to save money here and there and found that in 3 or 4 years time, there are games I can't run without upgrades on one sort or another. In the last 10 years we have gone through multiple interface changes for graphics cards alone and that doesn't look to be stopping anytime soon. So unless you can add another card to do SLI/Crossfire, you may be looking at buying a new motherboard just to upgrade your card. If the processors have moved on too much, it may be hard to find a MB to fit the socket of your processor. The RAM may be different, IDE cables not supported, etc, etc.
I also do not agree with buying the latest parts available as they always seem overpriced. Newest graphics cards and "extreme" processors and such are priced very high over their lower performing counterparts and the prices do not exactly reflect the increase in performance. I personally shoot for a "middle of the road" build. I try to use parts that have been around long enough to be proven performers that last and things that can hopefully be upgraded easily, overclocked or otherwise improved. My next build will include a I7 2700K, Asus P8P67 Deluxe, currently a EVGA GTX570, though I may upgrade to a 580 if prices drop enough with the 600 series. Not the latest technology for sure, not the most expensive, but it should be a solid build that should be able to play whatever I want for a few years. Unlike my last build, a Pentium 4, which was outclassed almost as soon as it was complete.
Just my .02