Motherboard and CPU for my nephew?

nuke

New member
Hi Lads
It's been a few years since I've posted here so I'm totally out of the loop. My 15 year old nephew has ask me to help him build a PC. What would be your recommendation for a CPU and Motherboard?
He saved his own money for this and I want him to get the best value he can so he can buy a better GPU. I'd prefer going with intel but would consider AMD. He won't be overclocking.
It will be for all types of games off of steam.
Also he lives in the US, what shops would you recommend over there.

Thanks
 
Really depends on what price you are looking to build the PC for.

Right now you need a minimum of 4 threads, meaning that you will need an Intel i3 (2 cores - 4 threads) or an AMD quad core or higher.
 
but hardware from 2016 are expensive. How looks a phenom X II from AMD with a mainboard with am3 socket? ?? or what processor with am3+
 
but hardware from 2016 are expensive. How looks a phenom X II from AMD with a mainboard with am3 socket? ?? or what processor with am3+

Absolutely not worth it mate, the phenom chips as well as the FX ones are waaay too old and innefficient, they won't get you the performance you'll need in games and will 'Bottleneck' the card. Only reason someone who is between an i5 and an FX chip should be productivity as still the octacores will edge the i5 in workloads like x264 encoding for videos
 
Hey Nuke!

According to your budget and limitations it seems an Intel build will fare better, although more expensive. Intel will perform much better at stock speeds in most scenarios but especially for gaming.

"Thelosouvlakia"'s build is pretty much as good as you can get without going over budget or overkill. Kudos to him!

If you or you're nephew is cool with it, used parts can easily drive up performance/cost ratio but then again, you don't get warantees, gaurantees, etc. Although keep in mind computer parts are relatively reliable. Used parts such as CPUs or GPUs rarely fail, especially today. Parts that should be new should be hard drives, SSDs (depends), and I generally recommend new power supplies that are at LEAST 80plus rated.
 
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