It was mostly because of the 32gb of Vram, and to make my 4K 240hz monitor to good use.No attack here at all - why did you went for 5090 and not 5080? You think that's worth it in the end?
You have games to use that on?
or you dont mind the prices?
Steam link is an app alreadyIf one day Steam ever decides to make their mobile app much more than just a storefront (because I think the entire end goal of gaming is for games to be playable in anywhere) I could see that blue line suddenly jumping much higher.
hoooly 4k240. Yep. You are going to need that 5090It was mostly because of the 32gb of Vram, and to make my 4K 240hz monitor to good use.
I wanted to make my new build as good as possible, so that I don't have to think about upgrading anything anytime soon.
I don't know if any current games makes a huge difference compared to 5080, but it sure feels great to play Black Myth silksmooth in high fps with everything set to max atm, and in 4K the 16gb vram on the 5080 felt a bit too little for a new upgrade now.
I was saving for a long time, and it feels good to be "done" for a good while, not thinking about any upgrades to the setup.
I have a 5080 and i dont give a shit about 4k amd never will. I dont need a monitor bigger than 27 inches and at 27 inches, at the distancr i am from the monitor, the difference between 1440p and 4k is barely noticeable, and you'd have to be looking for it. So yeah there is no way i will ever take the performance hit of 4k for such a marginal improvement.PC doesn't make any sense unless you aim for high end. RTX 5080 and 90 still can't do 4K natively at 30 FPS with path tracing. Imagine a mid-range GPU or even a lower-end one.
If you're just gonna game at 60 FPS you might as well buy a PS5 Pro and call it a day.
4080s and 4090s were widely available the last few years
The issue is that a lot of people stayed on the sidelines thinking they were"poor value" all this time. Little did they know...
What I am also noticing is.. what's happening to peripherals? Where are all the cool new headsets, mice, keyboards and stuff?
There used to be so much stuff. Now Logitech, razer and the other big guys barely do anything feels like
nobody is doing stuff. Audeze did Maxwell and ... nobody iterated on it, made other versions and counter attacked themHardware has been in a bad place (and progressively getting worse) since the bitcoin mining craze. Software selection is improving, but the quality has dropped severely. For all the console games that are being ported to PC, most are still better experienced on console. Very few games on PC are pushing boundaries, there is no HL2 or Crysis to encourage people to utilize the power the hardware is capable of. And for the games with high specs, it's because they are often unoptimized messes.
PC gaming was in a really good space from around 2005 to 2015, before and after have just not been worth it.
There's a ton of it out there, just mostly crap. You can only iterate so much on these things and there was a goldrush once PC gaming really took off, where every manufacturer was pushing branded gamer gear. Now you have the top brands with their core product lines, and Aliexpress bullshit to fill in the lower end.
That's a good point actually. Most people are playing games that are 100% possible on current consoles and honestly older consoles as well especially now that consoles support M/KB.Hardware has been in a bad place (and progressively getting worse) since the bitcoin mining craze. Software selection is improving, but the quality has dropped severely. For all the console games that are being ported to PC, most are still better experienced on console. Very few games on PC are pushing boundaries, there is no HL2 or Crysis to encourage people to utilize the power the hardware is capable of. And for the games with high specs, it's because they are often unoptimized messes.
PC gaming was in a really good space from around 2005 to 2015, before and after have just not been worth it.
This happens with all technology though really. Look at phones for example where the vast majority of new phones are simply slabs of glass that simply get new internals every year. It's hard to innovate past a certain point.There's a ton of it out there, just mostly crap. You can only iterate so much on these things and there was a goldrush once PC gaming really took off, where every manufacturer was pushing branded gamer gear. Now you have the top brands with their core product lines, and Aliexpress bullshit to fill in the lower end.
nobody is doing stuff. Audeze did Maxwell and ... nobody iterated on it, made other versions and counter attacked them
Maxwell itself should be now v2 or v3 but it's still the same headset with the same issues as day 1.
Sony headsets still all break on the hinge, Razer the same... just no innovation, no quality
This happens with all technology though really. Look at phones for example where the vast majority of new phones are simply slabs of glass that simply get new internals every year. It's hard to innovate past a certain point.
I meant natively, not streaming.Steam link is an app already
$720 for a machine that's weaker than the ps5 pro and has a similar gpu to the ps5 with a better cpu? That's a bad place to be 5 years after the ps5 released.High-end gaming? Yes.
Mid-range and entry-level are in pretty good spots though. The biggest hurdle right now is lack of available inventory.
Here's a quick build I put together for my kid. It's even more expensive because I want ITX/super small form factor, but this will tackle pretty much every game maxed out at 1080p/60fps just fine:
PCPartPicker Part List
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 5600 3.5 GHz 6-Core Processor ($119.00 @ Amazon)
Motherboard: Gigabyte A520I AC Mini ITX AM4 Motherboard ($119.99 @ Amazon)
Memory: TEAMGROUP T-Force Vulcan Z 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR4-3200 CL16 Memory ($46.99 @ Newegg)
Storage: MSI SPATIUM M480 PRO 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive ($84.99 @ Newegg)
Video Card: Sparkle GUARDIAN OC Arc B570 10 GB Video Card ($229.99 @ Amazon)
Case: Jonsbo C6-ITX Mini ITX Desktop Case ($59.99 @ Newegg Sellers)
Power Supply: Thermaltake Toughpower GX2 600 W 80+ Gold Certified ATX Power Supply ($59.99 @ Amazon)
Total: $720.94
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2025-02-15 13:05 EST-0500
People buying mid-range pcs aren't interested in competing with consoles.$720 for a machine that's weaker than the ps5 pro and has a similar gpu to the ps5 with a better cpu? That's a bad place to be 5 years after the ps5 released.
A good motherboard is $600-700 now. Top of the line CPU is $600, factory, memory $200, 5080 is $1k. That's $2500 right there alone.Ok uhhh wtf are you building like that? A 3K computer right now would build you a 5090 PC with a 9600X, 850w PSU, 1tb SSD, a peerless assassin and whatever case you decided to throw it in.
A 1200 dollar PC in 2017 is like 1400 now.
There's not a single thing gaming wise that a motherboard over 150 will do for you. If you're doing something in a data center or something high power that requires all that then yes, but for gaming a mid range motherboard has and will continue to be the best optionA good motherboard is $600-700 now. Top of the line CPU is $600, factory, memory $200, 5080 is $1k. That's $2500 right there alone.
It's really about value for money. If I'm going to spend that much on a computer, it needs to offer better value for money. At this point last gen, if you spent $720, you'd get better value for money than a console.People buying mid-range pcs aren't interested in competing with consoles.
$720 for a machine that's weaker than the ps5 pro and has a similar gpu to the ps5 with a better cpu? That's a bad place to be 5 years after the ps5 released.
The value people are looking at isn't just teraflops for dollar. There are the games, the different uses they may have, customizability, etc.It's really about value for money. If I'm going to spend that much on a computer, it needs to offer better value for money. At this point last gen, if you spent $720, you'd get better value for money than a console.
WTF are you talking about with your $700 motherboard? You can get a fantastic one for $200-300.A good motherboard is $600-700 now. Top of the line CPU is $600, factory, memory $200, 5080 is $1k. That's $2500 right there alone.
I believe the PC market is in a better place than it was 10 years ago. However, I do believe that the GPU market is going to price console gamers out of the market at a time the market could capitalize. The under $1000 budget PCs are not going to go as far as they used to.
Nonsense. Unless it's a horribly botched port or you're sitting on a weak system you get at minimum better FPS and image quality.For all the console games that are being ported to PC, most are still better experienced on console.
as it's always been....Very few games on PC are pushing boundaries, there is no HL2 or Crysis to encourage people to utilize the power the hardware is capable of.
That's also nothing new..... We've had those since before the graphics got 3 dimensional.....And for the games with high specs, it's because they are often unoptimized messes.
worst case the next console gen will just be a smaller node hardware refresh with extra ml and RT hardware slapped on top but it's definitely not gonna get priced outside of the mass market.I do believe that the GPU market is going to price console gamers out of the market
PC gamers have 2/3 console platforms opening up their libraries to them.
Means a lot when 20 years ago PC was getting 0/3 console libraries but now they're getting 2/3.That would mean more if the PC platform itself had loads of coveted, exclusive titles like it did back in the 90s and early 2000s. The last true killer app the PC had was Crysis back in 2007.
?I believe the PC market is in a better place than it was 10 years ago. However, I do believe that the GPU market is going to price console gamers out of the market at a time the market could capitalize. The under $1000 budget PCs are not going to go as far as they used to.