[-] DevForFun150@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Not sure what worldwide prices are like, but I just bought 10 1TB PNY SSDs for $315 total. $31 apiece. Would have been $34 without volume pricing, but still, they are actually cheaper than HDDs at this point.

[-] DevForFun150@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

I don't know what your local market looks like, but probably. The goal is still an i7 6xxx or i5 8xxx or newer. At least 210W PSU, and find a way to 16fb RAM. SSD is absolutely required. RAM and SSD prices have dramatically fallen in the US at least, not sure about worldwide. The Rx 6400 can be bought new on Amazon, Alibaba, or straight from AMD.

Try to find a mid-high end computer which is several years old and upgrade it. Where I am, you absolutely can not build a computer cheaper than buying a slightly outdated one.

[-] DevForFun150@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Oh yeah, I meant for those to be a list. It should read:

Computer - $40

GPU - $120

SSD - $40

I don't think I can edit the OP, sorry

11

While not technically a new player, I might as well be. I played back when Loki was my starter frame, and I don't remember the planets being locked on the star chart. I have started over on a fresh account to try to learn the game, but holy cow there's so much going on I am completely overwhelmed.

Do I need to really learn the following systems? Can I ignore any of these until later on, or do I need to focus on some now?

Railjack

Archwing

Void Keys

Fishing

Mining

Building my own weapons/pets/robot companions

Levelling up my Tenno powers

Conclave PVP

Riven mods

Trying to figure all this out while getting mastery ranks to unlock more trades and new weapons is a lot of mental overhead. Also, will there be stuff in the lategame that is more challenging and requires me to actually upgrade stuff? It's pretty easy so far.

[-] DevForFun150@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I only sell them locally in my city period, but yes I am operating from the US. You can try to follow the guide above and build your own, though! Shipping costs would make this much less cost effective, potentially.

I run a small computer repair shop and do some work with local charities, and they get a lot of requests for gaming PCs that they can't fulfill. This is just a solution for that.

[-] DevForFun150@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I only sell them locally period, and only a limited supply. You can try to follow the guide above and build your own, though! Shipping costs would make this much less cost effective, potentially.

[-] DevForFun150@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

I've sold two of them to parents so far for exactly that purpose. Gamer parents who want to play with their kids, but not spend a ton of money on something that the kids might spill water on.

[-] DevForFun150@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Three reasons!

One, it is a very well known game.

Two, it is a pretty good looking game which is well optimized.

Three, it is locked to 60 FPS! That gives us a tangible goal when building, and if we can meet that FPS goal you get the same experience as someone with a $3,000 gaming computer. Of course not all settings are maxed out, but it is running at 1080p.

[-] DevForFun150@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've built 6 so far, kept two for personal use, sold two and gave two away to a local foster care charity. I plan to build 6 every couple of months and give away a third of them. I mark them up to just under $300 when I sell them, so this will allow me to slowly outfit local schools / after school care centers / children's charities with low budget gaming computers for the kids! Reception has been very positive so far, I am very upfront about what the computers are capable of and how they just look like basic office computers.

The $300 price tag still lets budget gamers get their hands on what is probably the cheapest prebuilt gaming machine available, and covers my costs for donating them. And again, this is all local, I live in a pretty small town of only about 100,000.

25

This clip is just a quick 1 minute gameplay due to Imgur file size concerns. I've been experimenting with extreme budget gaming PCs for local schools and children's charities, and this is what I've come up with. The build is extremely simple, but hard to replicate in bulk. Full build and purchasing guide to follow.

Specs of this computer:

Windows 11 Home

Intel i7-6700

16GB RAM

AMD RX-6400

1TB SSD

This build relies on one of two machines; a Dell Optiplex 7050-7080 OR an HP 590-P0050. These are extremely common business and government computers and can almost always be found for resale on eBay or similar sites. There are several eBay stores which buy these devices from the US government and Universities in large quantities, then sell them in 1-5 device lots for a profit.

On average, I spend $60 per computer with shipping. This takes some patience. You're looking for any i7 6th gen or newer, at least 210W power supply, or any i5 8th gen or newer. Try to get 16GB of RAM, but if it comes with 8GB then just buy another stick for $15 also from eBay.

For the GPU, I either use an AMD RX 6400 or an Nvidia GTX 1650. I use the RX if the computer comes with 210W PSU, and the 1650 if it has more power. The limiting factors for these builds are the power supplies and motherboards. The chosen GPU must be able get all of its power through the PCIe slot. These two are basically identical in performance. Average GPU cost $120, tend to buy them refurbished or on sale. You can get them brand new for $140.

Finally, I throw in a 2.5' 1TB SSD. These have gotten insanely cheap with the rise of m.2 drives, and can usually be bought for $40.

Price Recap of device used in recording

Computer - $40 GPU - $120 SSD - $40 Total - $200

TL',DR Buy government surplus enterprise grade Dell or HP desktop, install low powered GPU, wham bam cheap gaming machine.

DevForFun150

joined 1 year ago