I am looking to buy a gaming PC since my Zenbook isn't able to run DayZ and Planetside 2 properly.
And since I only moved from NZ to Australia a few months ago I have no idea where to get good gaming PCs at decent prices. Can anyone suggest a good shop (online or physical store in Brisbane) where I can buy an already built PC?
Thanks in advance!
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Clan Leader of
Protoss : ericma1123
find a good computer store (i think scorptech and umart and msy are in brisbane) and get the parts you want, and just pay ~$70-$90 or so for them to put it together if you aren't willing to do it yourself.
Last edited by |Erasmus|; Thu, 9th-Aug-2012 at 10:40 AM.
Great guide to current model stuff that's generally considered excellent quality/value. There's also a guide to Australian PC shops in that wiki with a bunch of ratings based on customer satisfaction. Shop around some of the high rated ones to find the best deal and to see who'll build for you... (hint: most shops probably will if you ask them, and they shouldn't charge tooo much for it).
Msy will be your best place to go they are really nice in there and they will tell you what specs and all to get they would also be able to put the computer together for you msy is prob tr cheapest store in Australia
Trinion, are you only wanting to buy the computer? or are you wanting to build it yourself?
If you're just wanting to play the game, go to the link Mayo posted,
if not I can suggest some good parts for you
Dont listen to Antelope he has a mac! j/k . If you are looking at pre builts mwave pre built pcs are decent value for their money I have purchased a lot of stuff off mwave and they are a pretty good mob to deal with. I also use to know someone who worked at scorptech and they are good too. PC case gear will probably be the cheapest and are awesome too got alot of my last build stuff from them , cant go wrong with any of them really but like mayo said support the company that supports the scene (if they have what you want).
A question regarding the PC's CPU. Does it generally make a difference if its i5 or i7? What differences do they generally make?
i5s are generally dual/quad core and don't have hyperthreading. i7s are all quad core and all have hyperthreading. Hyperthreading is cute, and will help out in some situations with your computers responsiveness (basically if there are multiple unrelated things (and i mean really low level computery unrelated things) it will sometimes do them both at once, making it look like more than a quad core).
tl;dr: if you don't already know what it is, you aren't likely doing anything technical that might see the real benefits of that kind of technology.
These days for gaming you'd probably want a mid-high end i5 quad, 8-16GB of ram, and spend 2-300 on whatever graphics card whirlpool likes best in that priice range. Don't spend more than $100 on a motherboard, and don't get a combined case/power supply package because 90% of the time they package a crap power supply they want to move with it.
umart is easier to browse for their particular equipment, but for 1k you should be fine to get a decent gaming pc, it wont be amazing but can run everything you need.
From what ive seen recently anything i5 or above or any gfx card with 1gig in it can run pretty much any game these days.
EDIT: http://umart.com.au/newindex2.phtml?bid=5 this will probably be perfect for you
EDIT2: grr link wont work if you go Desktop computers --> computer package --> gaming series --> intel advanced gamer for $1039 prob your best bet
Product Description:
1 Years return to base Warranty
Intel Core i5 3570K CPU - 3.4Ghz
Gigabyte / Asus Z77 Motherboard
8G DDR3-1600MHz RAM
1TB SATAIII 7200RPM Hard Disk
22X DVD Burner
ATI HD7850 PCI-E 2GB GPU
Antec Three Hundred Case
550W 80+ PSU
Last edited by Unstable; Thu, 9th-Aug-2012 at 12:35 PM.
Good prices, good stuff, and it's easier to get everything in one place. Their main office is at Milton which is generally very easy to get to. Ipswich and Rosewood (Green in the South and West directions) Train then a 1k walk past all the delicious food. But it's smarter to bring a car... less temptation by the delicious food!
PC part picker is a really good website it also allows you too see whats compatible with what here's a really good build that is well in your budget and is a really solid machine http://pcpartpicker.com/p/dYae
As mentioned before, i5's are the models WITHOUT hyperthreading, whereas i7's are the models WITH hyperthreading. For gaming you most definitely want an i5, with one particular exception: If you want to stream in 1080p, an i7 will be of benefit to you (Its not NECESSARY, but it does make the process less painful on your pc, its up to you whether you deem streaming alone as a necessary reason for the price hike and slight performance hit in other areas).
At around $1000, you can make a very nice PC. Personally I would go for a good i5 with a strong motherboard (People will say the motherboard makes no difference, but its the component most worthwhile to futureproof, for example, lots of sata 3/USB3 ports), and probably a 7850 or 7870 graphics card. The aforementioned Whirlpool list of PC's is a very good place to start if you are not entirely sure of what you are looking for, but have a budget
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