These CPUs make for an exceptional performer. While power consumption is much to be desired. They tend to be quite powerful and found quite cheap.i think these are still decent budget offerings
MB
The mucai h61 is a pretty decent MB. Extremely cheap can be picked up for as little as £13 on alliexpress I can speak from experience having used my h61 for 7 months now
Intels own brand of MB can tend to be quite cheap and can be picked for as little as £15. Do research into the model of intel MB you'll be getting as these tend to be quite finicky from what I hear.
If you've got a bit more to spend. I advice you go for the AMD Rx 480/570 or perhaps do what I did and save. I managed to get a gtx 980ti for a whopping £20.
PSUS
You should never cheap out on your PSU. Get a cheap name brand if possible. I recommend checking for old stock. And display items it's how I landed a Corsair CX550.for a whopping £27.58.
did you just randomly glue together paragraphs from different sources? because that last paragraph, written by some illiterate clown who never heard of punctuation, was definitely not written by the same person as the others.
I've got a gtx 980ti absolute beauty both the 900 and 10xx series GPUs are amazing . Sadly those sandy/ivy bridge CPUs are getting older in years and don't support the latest instruction sets. But they are still perfect for running most games today.
For a low end, small, low consumption Intel box for HTPC/Kodi, Home assistant, Frigate, small Home Server or all of the above, I can recommend any N100-based box or mini itx mobo. It's very fast compared to prior Intel low consumption CPUs (apollo lake etc), does 4K, HDR, AV1.
I don't know what the CPU mentioned costs, but it looks like about 100£ listed for the rest of the parts. You can get a prebuilt Ryzen 7 5800H with 16GB RAM and a 500GB NVMe drive, incl. monitor cables and power brick, off Amazon NIB for something like $280. It's just fine for games. Unless you're throwing a high end GPU in there specifically for gaming, the DIY option doesn't seem to make a lot of sense to me these days. And if you're not gaming? The Ryzen 5 model is $230.
I'm with you; building yourself is something that - these days - you do if you're trying to do one of two things: get started learning to put together computers; or going for some specialized (and probably high-end) rig. Trying to cobble things together out of spare parts bought online doesn't seem to have much of a value proposition.
It really depends on where you look.And how patient you are. You can find some amazing deals and there certainly is alot of value proposition. And in some cases it might work out better to purchase an old prebuilt. Generally I recommend if your purchasing ram or a blue-ray drives to check out CEX.
I don't think this is true. I use a similar setup for gaming and I'm able to play incredibly graphically demanding games such as cyberpunk 2077 and teardown. At quite decent framerates.