this post was submitted on 17 Feb 2026
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I feel your pain. I've been saving up for over a year to try to build a gaming PC, my ancient potato laptop already having been on its last legs for a long time. But I guess it would be foolish to try to do that now, which really guts me. For anyone reading this who has a better understanding of these things, should I:
Really is the million dollar question. I wish I could answer this but I've found myself pondering the same questions.
The bubble may not pop for a year or two, it could never pop with government bailing the companies out and merging the assets of the failures into the existing big tech giants like Amazon, Microsoft and we see no real reduction in prices. There could be a very real conspiracy to kill owning personal computers in order to sell subscription cloud computing and AI services to consumers. After all most consumers are not going to shell out $200/month for a pro AI subscription. But if they can no longer build or buy a gaming PC and that AI subscription is sold as a cloud gaming, computer, and AI bundle? Maybe they'd shell out money then. And so I worry the thinking goes.
The CEO of a big component maker recently said that if the current trajectory continues consumer electronic manufacturers are going to start going bankrupt, they can't compete, they have few customers at the price points they're looking at, and the component makers of things like memory are demanding ridiculous multi-year contracts and payment ahead of time to even consider working with them. If that were to occur we'd enter a very dire period. Things would eventually recover, China if no one else would eventually build out more capacity and start selling but that could take 5 years or more (could easily be 8 years to recover in terms of pricing lowering meaningfully in the west given their speed of things if Chinese components are not available or allowed).
The least risky decision is build what you can now, don't buy the top end components but something a generation older or a tier down in power if it costs a lot less (doesn't always cost a lot less so pays to shop around and compare). Then again I'm not an expert, for all I know by August or Black Friday there could be sales that drop the current prices, on the other hand the sales then could end up being merely dropping to the prices we have now or even higher than what we have now or there could be only limited sales that instantly sell out due to low inventory.
Otherwise you just have to wait and pay attention during sales periods to see if things get better with the understanding you could be waiting 2 years, 3 years, even an outside chance of longer than that.
Fact is prices for many components were at historic lows in late 2025. DRAM was cheap, SSDs had never been cheaper, I could get a 2TB TLC SSD with DRAM cache from the top brands for $150 or a 4TB model for $300. Now 2TB are barely in stock at all and when they are they're $300 or more and the 4TB are $600. So I think even coming off some price increases there is room for prices to get worse. The best time to buy was December 2025, the second best time was January when price increases were coming and had started to hit but hadn't really fully hit.
Either way is a gamble. If you gamble right now you spend more than you'd like but you have what you want, if you gamble on waiting you may not get what you want or pay even more or you could win the gamble and pay less but you'll still likely be waiting 12 months.
There is the option of trying to find stuff on the used market including a fully built gaming PCs or components. Of course this isn't without its own gambles and risks and prices there are high but may be lower in some instances for older components than anything you can find new.
I don't know but I'm sort of worried that the bubble bursting won't increase part availability again. Often when demand/prices go back down after hikes in demand manufacturers don't survive.
Maybe try to see if you could get a prebuilt PC for a decent price, they’re not usually the greatest of deals but if you’re desperate, they’re a pretty okay choice right now.
When I built my first system was around the time crypto was affecting prices. I ended up getting an entry level card that was just good enough to run games on my 1080P monitor at at least 60fps. When things cooled off I upgraded my card.
At this point though, Im not sure it'd make sense to try and build something with how many components are affected. And thats what makes deciding tough. There's a good chance that you'll be waiting for a year, possibly more. I think even if the AI bubble bursted tomorrow you'd still have to wait a while because a lot of the silicon needed for these components are going into hardware specifically build for AI datacenters, unlike with how cryptominers were able to use consumer GPUs.
So I'd say it depends on whether or not you'd want to wait long term.
They-dude, we're getting RE Requiem on PS4. We're getting Mario Kart World tracks ported to Mario Kart Wii. I will NEVER upgrade.
Edit: I have been informed by my research team Requiem is not getting a PS4 release. We will play a Game Boy Color Demake of it in 2032 then.
TBH a major part of why I wanted a gaming PC was so that I could pirate games. I can't do that on a PS4. Even though I only ever buy games on sale, I still wince at how much I've spent over time especially on some games that I just ended up not liking and never playing, games that would have been free if I had pirated them.
There are also a lot of games that make sense on PC that just don't work with consoles/controllers, like most RTS games. There are a lot of games I would love to play that are on console, but I don't get them because it's the mods that make them worth playing, but I can't install mods on a console. I don't play any multiplayer games because I'd have to pay a monthly fee for PS+ that I'm just not willing to pay, but playing those games multiplayer on PC is free.
I don't really care much about having the greatest bestest graphics ever (although higher frame rate on anything is easier on my headaches which does make a huge difference), and if I can't run the latest AAAA slop, then whatever, that's fine, nbd. But I do care a lot about having some control over the hardware my games run on and thus the games themselves, and there is just none on console.