I am interested in building myself a gaming computer, but my funds are limited and I figured it would be kind of fun to do it over time. Like first I'll buy the case, then next month a mobo, etc.
Starting with this motherboard:
http://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82...
Would that be viable, or would some of the stuff I bought to begin with be getting old by the time I finished?
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I bought a gaming quad-core 2 years ago that is still fast, I did update the video card last year. Buy the case first, one with 2 or 3 120mm fans will be plenty for cooling. Cases dont change much. AMD cpus give you more for the dollar. DDR3 mobos and ram dont cost much more than DDR2. Newegg.com is the best store I have found for dependabilty and cost and they ship it the day you order it. If your processor is AM3 then so must your mobo be. Same socket number for mobo and cpu. At Newegg, click on 'specifications' for details. The one you build will be good for 2 to 3 years, but upgrading in the future as you go you will get faster better parts for less money.
pretty much the time there released, there is always something better being worked on and coming out.
i'd save up and buy everything at once, rather then in installments. since parts can be faulty even when new and can be replaced once you find out with the first boot up, if you leave it for months it's usually more of a hassle to return and get replaced.
also if you save up and buy all the parts together, the parts will probably be cheaper by then! and you wont be able to use them anyway untill you have everything.
Edit_
personally i'd plough the majority of my money into the graphics card, PSU (very important and usually overlooked for a cheapo one, bad bad BAD idea!) then CPU then RAM and then the Motherboard, everything else would be on a budget.
that motherboard seems a little bit of a waste of money, if you were to go with a SLI/crossfire setup maybe it would be a good idea, but i'd personally go with a cheaper motherboard, if you intend to overclock, there are other gigabyte boards that overclock just aswell, and then you could invest the diffrence into a good cooling system.
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that is for sure a good idea, the only things on a pc that go obsolete quickly are the cpu and gpu, i've had the same motherboard for about 5 years, i've changed the gpu twice, and the cpu once.
i'd go for something better, the motherboard is a pain to upgrade later on, get the best one you can afford.
Sadly this question is best answered this way:
As soon as you buy your computer, it's out of date.
:/