November 27, 2022

Gaming PC Upgrades: 2022-2023

Another quick(ish) IT aside, but I've been chasing deals on components for the past couple months to do in-place upgrades for our primary workstations/gaming rigs. I used this long holiday weekend to finish assembling everything and get both PROTH and I back up and running OS/software-wise. Residual customization and related detail work will probably continue for another couple weeks as we both settle in, but it feels great to have a fresh installation humming along on improved hardware. 

The research, deal-hunting, and eventual assembly are always fun for me, but things were complicated this time around due to especially awful price hikes from Nvidia; sticker shock from the pricey AM5 motherboards and DDR5 needed for AMD's new Zen 4 line of CPUscrypto shenanigans in the tech sphere that, while less bad now, especially with Ethereum moving to proof of stake, continue to distort the price and availability of discrete GPUs; and all-around awful rates of inflation. I'd normally look to the upper mid-range CPUs from AMD latest generation – likely the impressive 7600X, which is the current successor to our old 2600X – but sticking with souped-up AM4 machines for a couple more years is easy math in our current environment. Plus, I was able to snag an amazing 25% off deal on the gaming powerhouse 5800X3D, and sticking with "older tech" has rarely felt this good in practice (here's a primer on CPU/GPU bottlenecking for reference).

Plus, I'm holding off on possible GPU upgrades for us until next year, when Diablo 4 (me) and Dragon Age 4 (PROTH) should finally grace us with their presence. Our RTX 2070s are still performing admirably at 2K, even if they're starting to show their age in next-gen games, and Nvidia's awful price-gouging for their 4xxx series GPUs doesn't leave me hopeful there will be affordable RTX 4060s of 4070s in our future, so a full shift to Team Red seems imminent. The fact that EVGA and its best-in-class RMA support team has also gotten out of the GPU game entirely makes that decision even easier. AMD's new RDNA 3 GPU architecture looks incredibly promising, and the *comparatively* cheaper and more scalable nature of its chiplet design makes an affordable RDNA3 GPU in the RX 7600-7800XT range seem likely sometime in 2023. And even if a reasonable 7xxx series contender doesn't materialize by then, the RX 6800 XT is still the logical choice. 

Otherwise, my 9-to-5 job has been incredibly busy of late, so I'm behind on my after-hours writing projects. I'm fortunately still on track to get one of those side hustles (SH#1, for brevity) wrapped-up in December, even though it will be a few months before I know if it merits any further installments. Either way, having SH#1 done and out the (e)door will at least free me up to refocus on the RW Project again. 

So until next time, I hope everyone has a safe, warm, and tasty holiday season. :)

Orbital HQ, out.

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