Upgrading to a 144Hz monitor will give you a lot better overall quality, and games will become much smoother (assuming you can reach around 144fps), however you could alternatively upgrade to a 1440p 60Hz monitor, or if you don't want to upgrade monitor until 4K gaming becomes the norm, then a...
Whether or not it will run 240Hz is very dependent on the game, the settings, and most importantly the resolution. If 1080p, not too graphically intensive game, and some tweaked settings to ensure a stable 240 fps, then yes it should run the majority of games at 240fps 1080p on medium+ settings...
One thing, you would probably be paying a bit more if you bought it from PCS, looking on Amazon, I can find it for around £270 from the link you gave me, but if you say its £303 from PCS, then you are paying an extra £30 to have it delivered with your PC. Probably a better idea to order it...
Like I said, perfectly capable card for entry-level 1440p, you won't expect to max everything out and run at 144fps, but you can expect some pretty playable frame rates on higher graphics and good frame rates on lower settings. At least this way you can probably upgrade to the 3000 series when...
Mind linking us the benchmarks, as the 2070 super is quite an improvement over the 2060 super, so that does sound rather bizarre. Even if that is true, if you plan on playing any other game at a later date, the 2070 super has got you covered at 1440p 144 fps - obviously depends on game and...
A 2060 would be your typical entry-level 1440p GPU, with something like a 2070 or 2080 being the kind of level you want to be at for 1440p at 144+fps. A 1440p monitor at 144Hz would be around £260 at minimum - here is the cheapest 1440p 144Hz monitor I could find, at £260...
Going to at least 550W will give you much more clearance for the system, and would leave more room for upgrades, that said if you want your PC to be more power efficient, bump it up to 650W as the lower power the PSU is supplying, the more efficient it is.
16GB of RAM is practically a must for...
Thats definitely some interesting changes, I'll have to have a think about what I want to change based on that, the storage is definitely overkill because I only need windows and 2 or 3 staple games plus my most frequently used programs, which will all fit, on the M.2 SSD, and I'm not sure a 2TB...
Only problem with that is because I've changed it a couple of times the link leads to a different spec. Unless you have a way for me to configure it and then send you a link rather than doing it through orders.
I'm pairing it with a AOC G2590FX 144Hz 1080p monitor, its basically for general gaming, some light stuff, maybe some heavier titles, I don't really know yet. I got a earlier quote with better prices so I believe the entire build should come to just under £1100 and thats basically the budget.
Everything has already been ordered and paid for but I would appreciate feedback.
I'm planning to overclock the 3600X which is why I went with a non-stock cooler.
Case
PCS PRISM RGB MID TOWER CASE
Processor (CPU)
AMD Ryzen 5 3600X Six Core CPU (3.8GHz-4.4GHz/36MB CACHE/AM4)
Motherboard
ASUS®...