this post was submitted on 05 Jan 2025
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Greentext

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[–] GreatAlbatross@feddit.uk 5 points 1 month ago (8 children)

I feel this.

I went AM4 in 2017 when the AMD gave a leap forward at a reasonable price and efficiency.

Then I added a 3060 when one became available.

They're both undervolted, and ticking along nicely.

I don't plan to change anything until probably 2027. Heck, I'm still catching up to 2020 in my games backlog.

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[–] BoxOfFeet@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I built a PC in 2011 with an AMD Phenom II. Can't remember which one, it may have been a 740. And I'm pretty sure a Radeon HD 5450 until FO4 came out in 2015 and I needed a new graphics card. Upgraded to a Radeon R7 240, and some other AM3 socketed CPU I found for like, $40 on eBay. By no means was I high end gaming over here. And it stayed that way until 2020, when I finally gutted the whole thing and started over. It ran everything I wanted to play. So I got like, 9 years out of about $600 in parts. That's including disc drives, power supply, case, and RAM. And I'm still using the case. I got my money's worth out of it, for sure. The whole time we were in our apartment, it was hooked up to our dumb TV. So, it was our only source of Netflix, YouTube, DVDs, and Blu-rays. It was running all the time. Then, I gave all the innards to my buddy to make his dad a PC for web browsing. It could still be going in some form, as far as I know.

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[–] CaptainBasculin@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Whether you upgrade it or not, it's always a safe bet to clean your pc from dust once a year; and change thermal paste like 2-3 years.

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[–] DaddleDew@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I still have my 2014 machine. I've upgraded it with an M.2 drive and more RAM. Everything else is perfectly fine and I wouldn't see the difference with a newer machine. I'll keep it for a long as I can because the longer I wait the better the machine I replace it with will be.

Also I just wouldn't know what to do with it after. I can't bring myself to throwing away a perfectly good machine, but keeping it would be hoarding.

[–] Yerbouti@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 month ago (6 children)

My 2009 i5 750 (oc at 3.6) can still play any game I throw at it.

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[–] LazerFX@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I had an i5-2500k from when they came out (I think 2011? Around that era) until 2020 - overclocked to 4.5Ghz, ran solid the whole time. Upgraded graphics card, drives, memory, etc. but that was incremental as needed. Now on an i7-10700k. The other PC has been sat on the side and may become my daughters or wife's at some point.

Get what you need, and incremental upgrades work.

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[–] FiskFisk33@startrek.website 4 points 1 month ago

it all depends on what you want to do with it, if it works for your use case all the better!

[–] eletes@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 month ago

Upgrading my ryzen 7 1700 and GTX 1080 for a 5800X3D and RX 7900 XT this weekend. Waiting for the CPU but it's cool to be able to go from first to last Gen that this motherboard can support

[–] SynopsisTantilize@lemm.ee 4 points 3 weeks ago

4770/1060 gang over here. Upgrading to a free 9600 this weekend.

[–] weeeeum@lemmy.world 4 points 4 weeks ago

I genuinely dont understand this. On time my friend bought an rtx 3060 (was using rx580).

I asked "oh cool, whay new games are you gonna play?". She said "none, I'm just gonna play the same ones". I asked "what was wrong with the old card?" And she said "idk just felt like I need a new one." We play games like tf2...

I just don't get this type of behaviour. She also has like 14 pairs of sneakers.

[–] sleepmode@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago

Only stopped using my Bulldozer-era box because it started crashing and freezing. And a BIOS fix Asus support suggested nuked my board. I had the thing maxed out... 12 SSDs in soft RAID, GTX570s in SLI. It was a monster. I still have most of the parts and I'm sure it would run a lot of stuff just fine at the cost of heat and noise :]

[–] HexesofVexes@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

My 1080Ti finally died this year (started overheating). I've kept it though, in the hope I can fix it one day...

Every other part is just cobbled together from older rigs or sporadic upgrade pushes when a sale looks good.

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[–] Talaraine@fedia.io 3 points 1 month ago

Gaming PCs are like cars, imo. You should be trying to get like 8 years out of them before you replace it.

Unlike most cars, most gaming PCs can then upgraded. Then they can be repurposed.

[–] oascany@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Yeah I'm daily-ing a laptop from 2019 with an i7-9750, a GTX1650, and 16 gb of RAM. No upgrades except storage. The GPU is the only thing that sometimes makes me go "hm."

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[–] ICastFist@programming.dev 3 points 1 month ago

My current PC is an asus rog with a gtx 1070 (and a piece of shit screen that gets all fucky if it heats) that I bought used, back in late 2019. The old hard drive failed some time ago and I had to change it, sometimes the main SSD seems to get strangely fucky (BSODs followed by disk scans), too, as does the memory (BSODs about "corrupted_page_memory", also complete freezes under Linux Mint, not even ctrl alt F1 worked), which makes me think the components aren't exactly high quality (considering how shitty the screen is and asus in general in the past years, that's no surprise)

Still, I fully intend to keep this bad boy as my main workhorse for at least another 2 years, possibly longer. After that, I'll probably relegate it to being the party game machine.

[–] spicytuna62@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I'm still rocking the 4790K. It's been a damn good CPU.

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My PC was made in 2014 and i upgraded it but it died in 2022 due to mishandling. If you keep your PC clean and don't move it it can last even longer!

[–] MXX53@programming.dev 3 points 3 weeks ago

I've been rocking a 1080ti since launch. Upgraded my 4th gen i7 to a 9th gen i9 on a sale a few years back. SSD upgraded when I got some that were going to be recycled.

Eventually I want to move to team red for linux compatibility. Other than that, I am sticking with what I have. (Doesn't help that I have 2 small children that all my money goes to. )

[–] Noodle07@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

My i5 3450 is really showing its limits, but I'm broke as fuck 🤷

[–] padge@lemmy.zip 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I'm the one person who people go to for PC part advice, but I actually try to talk them down. Like, do you need more RAM because your experience is negatively impacted by not having enough, or do you just think you should have more just because?

[–] JohnEdwa@sopuli.xyz 3 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago)

Ha, I had this exact conversation with a friend of mine a few days ago, he wants to upgrade from 16GB to 32GB and when I asked why, he just blanked out for a while and went "...because more is better, right?"

He spends most of his time playing rpg maker porn games and raid shadow legend, also really taxing that RTX 3070 he bought right in the middle of the pandemic.

[–] WorldsDumbestMan@lemmy.today 3 points 1 month ago

Still have a PC after 12 years that my brother is using

[–] MHLoppy@fedia.io 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

It's easy to go too far in either direction instead of just doing what fits your needs (which in fairness, can sometimes be difficult to precisely pin down). Blindly going "it's old, I need to upgrade" or "it still runs, it's not worth upgrading" will sometimes be right but it's not exactly tailored advice.

Someone I know was holding out for ages on a 4790K (2014), and upgraded a year or two ago to a then-current-gen system and said the difference it made to their workflow was huge - enough that they actually used that experience to tell their boss at work that the work systems (similar to what they had had themselves) should get upgraded.

At the end of 2022 I had had my current monitor(s) for about 10 years and had spent years of hearing everyone saying "wow upgrading my monitor was huge", saying that either 1440p was such an upgrade over 1080p and/or that high refresh rate (120+Hz) was such an upgrade over 60Hz. I am (or at least was in the past) a pretty competitive player in games so you'd think I'd be a prime candidate for it, but after swapping from a 60Hz 1200p screen to a 144Hz 1440p screen for my primary monitor I... honestly could barely notice the difference in games (yes, the higher refresh rate is definitely enabled, and ironically I can tell the difference easily outside of games lol).

I'm sensitive to input latency, so I can (or at least could, don't know if I still can) easily tell the difference between the responsiveness of ~90 FPS and ~150 FPS in games, so it's extra ironic that pumping the refresh rate of the screen itself didn't do much for me.

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[–] Irelephant@lemm.ee 3 points 3 weeks ago

Hey, mine is from 2014 too! runs linux and is fast enough for minecraft at 30fps and the sims 4.

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