I’m looking at this deal for a prebuilt:

Lenovo LOQ 17IRR9 Tower PC — $749.99

  • Intel Core i5-14400F (10 cores, 16 threads, up to 4.7GHz)
  • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 (8GB GDDR6)
  • RAM 16GB DDR5
  • 512GB SSD
  • PSU 500W

For some context, my PC has a 1070 in it. I’m a budget conscious gamer, usually playing at 1080p. With ram prices skyrocketing and steam betting on steam machines with low vram going forwards, I feel like it’s an okay deal for a guy who upgrades basically never.

It seems like a nice deal to me. Anyone want to talk me out of it?

  • themachine@lemmy.world
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    15 days ago

    Can you build it yourself for cheaper?

    Also, IMO 16GB is bare minimum in 2026 if you are using Windows. I’d really go to 32GB.

    • group_hug@sh.itjust.works
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      14 days ago

      It’s 2026. If you are on windows you should be planning your switch to Linux.

      Microsoft has no interest in you owning a computer. You can buy access to stream game rentals from their data centers while AI inserts ads and micro transactions into all the games.

  • Valmond@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    15 days ago

    10 cores, 16 threads. How does that work out, is it some bigLittle system?

    Just curious, last intel I used was like gen 8.

    • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      15 days ago

      Yes. Intel now splits their CPU’s with “P” cores (performance) that function like normal x86 processors with hyperthreading, and “E” cores (efficiency) that are lower clocked, less feature rich cores without HT.

      Most OS and background tasks can be loaded on E cores while P cores work strictly on high performance programs. Its not bad, except for the fact that its Intel building them.