FlipOver, on 18 August 2014 - 02:51 PM, said:
Thanks for the hint, but to be honest I don't see myself spending anything over 200-250Euro on a GPU. Probably will be going for something in the 200Euro range and I bet I'll get a really nice one around Christmas time for that price
FlipOver, on 19 August 2014 - 01:11 AM, said:
Well yes, I want to keep my options open in regards to any kind of upgrade, being GPU or CPU.
The only thing that made me think twice was the memory speed at which this MB can read them, but even that is more than enough for now and will be in a near future.
It had more than enough USB 3.0 slots, PCI slots, memory slots...
By buying this MB I'm preventing something that happened to me in the past, having to change it if I want to invest on GPUs or a better CPU.
I'm not pretending to know very much about these things, but I made some choices thinking ahead and for what I've managed to understand, the MB should really be the best quality you can afford.
These two statements make at least some sense individually (keeping in mind that you're still learning as you go here), but are somewhat illogical and contradictory, taken together.
In essence, I think you're starting to think along the right lines, but you're misplacing priorities. In many ways, the GPU is THE heart of a high end gaming system. Once a game is running, everything else, including the CPU, is essentially just support hardware, there to make sure your GPU is being fed enough of everything it needs to do its job and otherwise not hold your framerate back below what your GPU is capable of. Because of this, once all the other hardware in your system is doing that basic job, there's no benefit to having it be more powerful, whereas there's
always benefit to more GPU power, at least up to a ridiculously far-flung point.
Given this, it's extremely illogical to spend what has to be damn near 400 euros on a CPU and mobo, but only 200 on a GPU that then essentially won't even take advantage of how awesome the rest of the machine is most of the time. The GPU is precisely the part you don't want to spare an expense on, because there's always more benefit to more (again, for all intents and purposes). You've dug into your pockets this far, save a few more pennies and don't spend less than 300 on the GPU, preferably 400. You yourself have admitted you just bought the more expensive mobo, precisely because you didn't want some piece of essentially support hardware holding back what you want to buy, so BUY something worthy of it.
You could have probably pulled 100 euros off the board for a better GPU and lost nothing, but if you're buying Asus Sabertooth boards just for futureproofing in the first place, you're probably not on a strict, fixed budget
Edited by Catamount, 19 August 2014 - 07:40 AM.