AnthrSolidSnake said:
Oh man you're bringing back some memories!
I've had PC's for playing games with for a long time! I remember being very small, having a beige box with Windows 3.1 on there, installing Microprose Soccer from a floppy drive via command line!
Anyway, I'd say the first "real" rig is one I had custom made by the IT company my mum's business outsourced service to. It was a state of the art AMD Athlon dual core 2.4GHz processor with 1GB (yes, originally 1GB!) of RAM that I later upgraded to 4GB. It had a Nvidia 7950GT and a 250GB SATA 1 HDD. That thing literally beasted through the modern games of back then (circa 2007). Just under £1000
Moving on, the first rig I built myself was a year later (I got the bug, sue me). This was a quad core 2.6GHz AMD Phenom 9950 Black Edition processor with 4GB of DDR2 RAM (yeah, still DDR2, DDR3 was only just making its way in and very expensive). It had a Nvidia GTX 280 XXX edition (GPU core clocked a bit higher), a 1TB hard drive etc. Again, it was so amazing. It tore through most games, though Crysis still proved a challenge. Again, around the £1000 mark
From there I moved over to Intel with a first generation I5 at 2.6GHz, 4GB of DDR3 RAM, still rocking the GTX 280 because it still worked great. A newer, faster 1TB hard drive and a new cooler to OC my processor to 4.0GHz stable. I had also moved up to Windows 7 64 Bit, too. I had this configuration (and still have parts of it) to this day. I have since upgraded the core platform. 4GB became 8GB as games became more memory demanding, and I moved to an Ivy Bridge CPU and motherboard platform, which has given a nice performance boost. Also, I have stuck a 128GB SSD in there alongside my trusty 1TB, and am using it as the boot platform with the 1TB as storage for everything else. So this thing boots like a shot. The case also got changed from a fairly sizeable Antec 902 to a Silverstone Temjin 08 Evolution, which is much smaller. Oh and I upgraded my GTX 280 to an AMD HD 5970, which I will not need to upgrade for a long time (I played the long game with it at purchase, pay a lot for a very good card that will last me a long time). About £800 overall originally (as many parts were kept from the previous build), the 5970 was around £400, the Ivy Bridge platform was about £280, 8GB RAM upgrade about £40, the Silverstone case was about £65 (Silverstone cases are expensive, but well made). The SSD was about £70 (Samsung 830 Series 120GB).
I love PC building, and I'm always willing to give advice to anyone with questions. My gaming is primarily PC, though I do have some PS3 titles, too. Though with the ability to stick in a Xbox controller in there, I am finding myself buying titles, that would normally be more conducive to a console & joypad, on the PC.