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It would be a computer I would use for personal use, business use and gaming, so compatibility is extremely important. I'll probably avoid AMD cards for now since I have had so many problems with their drivers in the past. That is my only real requirement. I just haven't had time to do research recently so I'm not sure what some solid Mobos, cases, PSUs, etc. are right now.

It would be a computer I would use for personal use, business use and gaming, so compatibility is extremely important. I'll probably avoid AMD cards for now since I have had so many problems with their drivers in the past. That is my only real requirement. I just haven't had time to do research recently so I'm not sure what some solid Mobos, cases, PSUs, etc. are right now.

8 comments

[–] xyzzy 2 points (+2|-0)

I'd go with a Ryzen gen 3, lots of RAM (but not the fastest) and a medium priced nvidia, a pcie4 ssd and a big hdd for storage. Cases and PSUs are pretty much universal, the choice is on what's important to you.

[–] jobes [OP] 1 points (+1|-0)

I was hesitant about a Ryzen because I worked directly with AMD on a pre-release product while Gen 1 was being developed and...it had problems. Those are probably all cleared up by now, so I'll check it out.

[–] xyzzy 3 points (+3|-0)

AMD had problem processors before, especially early piledrivers. But I've only heard good from zen 2.