What Happens Now

We have the components for both of these systems in house, ready to build, test and review. This will take a couple of weeks, and we’ve chosen a good array of benchmarks to suit most needs while still retaining the focus of the purpose of this round of Build-A-Rig: a $1500 single monitor gaming machine. Given the responses from both Corsair and Zotac, it is clear that Corsair sees 4K gaming as the future and has designed for it, whereas the Zotac build might struggle at 4K but do great at 1080p/1440p which is ultimately where most gamers are at right now. With features like dynamic scaling resolution coming into the mix, perhaps the resolution of the panel is not the be-all and end-all of gaming.

Dustin Sklavos (Corsair) against Chinny Chuang (Zotac)

We will write up each PC for a full individual review, as well as a build log describing the experience of how the parts fit together. These reviews will be released over the next couple of weeks. Obviously the first one out of the gate gets the top results, but this is only because someone has to be the first tested (anyone remember Harry Enfield in Top Gear S01E01?). We have different editors working on each build as well, so each perspective should shed some light into how building the systems is easy, difficult, or fun to do.

How to Enter

For Build-A-Rig, we are posting the survey link on each piece so users can enter at any time. The final entry date is listed in the survey, and will most likely be a few days after we post our final round-up later in the month.

For the purposes of the giveaways, we should state that standard AnandTech rules apply. The full set of rules will be given in the survey link, but the overriding implementation is that the giveaways are limited to United States of America (US50), excluding Rhode Island, and winners must be 18 years or older.

With apologies to our many loyal readers outside the US, restricting the giveaways to the US is due to the fact that AnandTech (and more specifically our publisher, Purch) is a US registered company and competition law outside the US is very specific for each nation, with some requiring fees or legal implementations to be valid with various consequences if rules aren’t followed. It’s kind of difficult for the rules of 190+ countries/nations worldwide to all be followed, especially if certain ones demand fees for even offering a contest or tax on prizes. We recognize that other online magazines and companies do offer unrestricted worldwide competitions, but there are specific rules everyone should be following in order to stay on the side of the law. That’s the reality of it, and unfortunately we cannot change on this front, even with the help of Purch.

The survey link is:

http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/2209797/AnandTech-Newegg-Build-A-Rig-Challenge-Sweepstakes-Q2-2015

Your Thoughts

Not everyone builds a system the same way in the same budget, and it’s all fine and well for us here at AnandTech to reel off a parts list but it seems to be great fun for everyone involved when the manufacturers of the components actually do it instead. Clearly there are disagreements to be had over which case to use, whether this SSD is better than that SSD and all sorts of things. In our initial Build-A-Rig introduction, one reader (gamer1000k) suggested a full build given the budget, focusing on mini-ITX:

User: gamer1000k
Name: Destroyer of Consoles
Case: Silverstone FTZ01B ITX $130
PSU: Silverstone SX600-G 600W $130
MB: ASRock Z97E-ITX $130
CPU: Intel Core-i5 4690K $240
RAM: G.SKILL Sniper 2x4GB DDR3-1866 $58
GPU: Zotac NVIDIA GTX 980ti AMP! $650
SSD: Crucial MX200 250GB $103
CPU Cooler: Corsair H55 $60
OS: SteamOS or Windows 10 Preview $0
Total: $1501

Rationale: Recently I've become fascinated with ITX gaming systems, and Silverstone makes some amazing cases that allow for a tremendous amount of power in a console form factor. This build takes into account not only traditional GPU bound games, but also provides a very fast CPU with a lot of overclocking headroom (courtesy Corsair H55 and 600W PSU) for some of the newer indie games (like Kerbal Space Program) that are actually CPU bound. The potent combination of an overclocked i5 and 980ti should allow for 4K gaming at reasonably high settings. This system is designed to be used in conjunction with a NAS/media server due to the low internal storage, but if the budget were flexible this case has room for another 2.5" and 3.5" drive.

This actually aligns quite well with Corsair’s build, with the CPU and GPU, although takes the mini-ITX route with less memory but some wiggle room due to the use of a ‘free’ operating system. I’d also be wary of the DRAM and storage, as these are difficult things to budget around without dropping capacity significantly.

So do you prefer having two extreme items and upgrading over time, or having a general all-around system every few years? Thoughts and comments on the builds from Corsair or Zotac are highly recommended. If you would take a different build completely (perhaps AMD, or dual GPU), we might loop a group of them into a pipeline post to see how they compare, so any explanation for choosing some parts over others (such as how gamer1000k has above) would be interesting to read.

Build-A-Rig R1: Zotac’s Hey Good Lookin’
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  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    We specified this build as $1500 single monitor gaming, and left it at that. It was up to the entrant to decide if that was 1080p, 1440p or 4K, or if that meant steambox type arrangements or hardcore PC type builds. We specify budget and direction, and the rest is up to them. That means they have to consider the audience they're building for, and design appropriately. If we lock it down too much, we end up with minor variations of case, CPU and GPU.

    If you've got an idea for a future budget / build aim, e.g. $700 HTPC, let me know. I'm compiling a list of what people are requesting for future rounds of the project.
  • Freaky_Angelus - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    Good day Ian,

    Not so much requesting but merely suggesting that the already proposed 'console' idea gets a more separate field or the HTPC needs Audio as a required component.

    For me HTPC means showing exactly that, Home Theater and would be stuck at 4 requirements:
    - Playback video
    - Audio delivery
    - Design
    - Storage

    $700 is rather high (considering my now old HTPC of €350) for just a htpc build, the upgrade to 4K (don't have, but it can barely do that) is minimal on that. You'll need a full Home Theater build (including audio approach i.m.o.) to make it interesting on $700.

    If you'd expand that direction towards a Console HTPC, as gamer1000k did, regardles of budget for the competition, you'll have a direction that can go many ways. You define the TV and state: "Budget X and build a console HTPC for this TV. Room has couch, go fill!"

    With the same $1500, gamer1000k will now have a (close to) perfect console, but no way to listen to music except the earplugs his phone brought with him ;) That may make the overall competition more challenging as I'm afraid this current setup will see a lot of i5 4660/4760K etc cores combined with 960/970/980 selections.
  • Freaky_Angelus - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    Sorry, obvious the TV has some speakers but no self-respecting movie fan will disagree you need more than that ;) so in advance, yes gamer1000k could also listen through the TV!
  • wrkingclass_hero - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    I wish that the Build-A-Rig contest was champion format, with the previous winner returning to face the new challenger, that way I get to see Dustin kick everyones' asses as the perennial champ.
  • Galcobar - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    Noticed in a few spots that specs for parts weren't filled in; i.e. on The Accelerator build page the GPU draws 2xx watts.
  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    Thanks for the catch! I wrote some of this offline while travelling and didn't have immediate access to the data, then didn't see it on the copy edit runs. I found two of the missing bits of info - any more let me know. :)
  • leopard_jumps - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    PCPartPicker part list: http://pcpartpicker.com/p/MfwFLk
    Price breakdown by merchant: http://pcpartpicker.com/p/MfwFLk/by_merchant/

    CPU: Intel Xeon E3-1241 V3 3.5GHz Quad-Core Processor ($263.99 @ SuperBiiz)
    Motherboard: MSI Z97-GAMING 5 ATX LGA1150 Motherboard ($139.99 @ SuperBiiz)
    Memory: G.Skill Ares Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR3-1866 Memory ($53.99 @ Newegg)
    Storage: Samsung 850 EVO-Series 250GB 2.5" Solid State Drive ($97.99 @ Amazon)
    Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 980 Ti 6GB Superclocked+ ACX 2.0+ Video Card ($688.99 @ B&H)
    Case: Corsair 300R ATX Mid Tower Case ($49.99 @ Newegg)
    Power Supply: SeaSonic G 550W 80+ Gold Certified Semi-Modular ATX Power Supply ($78.99 @ SuperBiiz)
    Operating System: Microsoft Windows 8.1 OEM (64-bit) ($86.98 @ OutletPC)
    Total: $1460.91
    Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
    Generated by PCPartPicker 2015-07-09 03:34 EDT-0400
  • OregonSlacker - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    Chinny gets my vote for personality, build looks and overall fun, Dustin gets my vote for Tech Knowledge and Choice of hardware... as a gamer I'd have to admit I'd rather have Dustin's build , overclocking ability, more ram and the 980ti over the faulted 970 any day of the week. Sorry Chinny, we still love you and hope to see ya soon again at PDXlan! -OregonSlacker aka Shane Dickson
  • Chinny Chuang - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    Yeah...I totally agree; I would like to go for the GTX 980 Ti AMP if it was available while we finished the build. I love Dustin's too; hopefully I will see you guys soon! 😊
  • OC'd Packrat - Thursday, July 9, 2015 - link

    Both builds are quite nice, but Dustin's seems to have a more cohesive selection of components with the nice 4690k-980ti pair powered by a reasonable 650W PSU, with 16GB of ram for about the same price as Good Lookin's 8GB. An H100i might be overkill for Good Lookin's non-overclocking CPU (save $30-$40 here!), and the PSU may never quite make use of its larger wattage, but Zotac's build does seem to fulfill its cool, quiet minimalist goals.

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