JUN 2022 97
Sponsored byWE DIDN’T CHANGE the power supplies found in our mid-range
systems this month because the NZXT C750 and EVGA SuperNOVA
750 GA remain the best-value PSUs available at this wattage. At the
time of writing, you can buy the C750 for just $40, but only if you have
all the power cables you need since this one comes without.
Approximate Price: $1,819 / $2,029 Approximate Price: $1,674 / $1,888
AMD INGREDIENTS INTEL INGREDIENTSPART PRICESTREET
PRICECase Lian Li PC-O11-Dynamic $183PSU 750W NZXT C750 80+ Gold $90Mobo Gigabyte X570 Gaming X NEW $130CPU AMD Ryzen 7 5800X $349Cooler Raijintek Orcus 240 RBW ARGB NEW $80GPU Sapphire PULSE Radeon
RX 6800 XT 16GB NEW
$649
$859RAM 32GB (2 x 16GB) Kingston FURY
Renegade RGB CL16 @ 3600MHz NEW
$150SSD 500GB Samsung 980 Pro NVME
M.2 PCIe 4.0 SSD
$102HDD 4TB WD Blue 5400 HDD $54OS Windows 10 Home 64-bit OEM
(Windows 11 Compatible)
$32PART PRICESTREET
PRICECase Lian Li PC-O11-Dynamic $183PSU 750W EVGA SuperNOVA 750 GA 80+ Gold $95Mobo ASUS Prime Z690-P LGA 1700 $188CPU Intel Core i7-12700F $313Cooler Corsair iCue H100i RGB Pro XT 240mm $72GPU Asus TUF Gaming GeForce
RTX 3070 8GB NEW
$499
$713RAM 32GB (2 x 16GB) Corsair Vengeance
RGB RT CL16 @ 3600MHz NEW
$157SSD 500GB Corsair Force MP600 M.2 PCIe 4.0 $81HDD 4TB WD Blue 5400 HDD $54OS Windows 10 Home 64-bit OEM
(Windows 11 Compatible)
$32Both systems keep their processors for now but the AMD build
gets a new motherboard, the X570 Gaming X from Gigabyte, an
absolute steal at $130. The Intel rig keeps its Asus Prime mobo,
thanks to an excellent sale that drops the price by more than $40
from RRP. For $3 more, you can upgrade to the WiFi-enabled
version of that Asus board; a potentially savvy decision for future-
proofing your build even if you currently have easy Ethernet access.
A sale on Raijintek’s Orcus 240 RBW all-in-one liquid cooler
prompted us to use it in the AMD system this month, with the price
dropping from $110 to $80. This cooler also has addressable RGB
fans and pump block, which is a nice extra but it doesn’t have LGA
1700 socket compatibility, so wouldn’t have worked in the Intel build.
Instead, that retains the Corsair H100i cooler (no longer on sale).
Joining the AMD build’s new arrivals this month is the Sapphire
PULSE Radeon RX 6800 XT, cheaper than the previous 6800 XT we
were using last month. Prices of mid-to-high-end GPUs seem to be
easing, though not as quickly as budget cards. The Intel system gets
an RTX 3070 from EVGA, which is also cheaper than last month’s
Asus TUF model but not as much of an expense drop as the 6800 XT.
We’re making one last big change to our midrange builds in
this issue: an upgrade to 32GB of total RAM. This will increase the
total price, but falling GPU prices and greater performance from
current-gen CPUs with access to more memory inspired us to
make the switch. The AMD system gets the discounted Kingston
FURY Renegade RGB, while the Intel system sticks with the Corsair
Vengeance RGB RT (while upgrading to 16GB per stick, of course).MID-RANGE