Or maybe look for something new but upgradeable when prices get less insane.
EDIT: wow wtf I really got sucked into this
Hope my mashed together thoughts are helpful...
There are some problems with this:
1. AMD 5000 is the last gen on that socket. Next gen will feature DDR5, new socket etc.
-> You could get a B550 board and a 3600 and then upgrade to a 5600x or 5800x in the future
-> Problem: 3600 (x/xt) went up to insane prices too...
2. Intel 6th,7th,8th,9th,10th gen are all basically the same architecture on the same nanometers...
-> 8th gen got 6 cores instead of 4
-> 9th gen got higher boosts
-> 10th gen got hyperthreading on the i5
The next gen is coming out in March. It's finally a new architecture but still 14nm. You'll gain quite a lot in single thread performance (most important vor simracing!) but the i9 will have 2 cores less and the heat will be similar due to the same 14 nanometers.
However you'll be able to run the 11th gen on a 10th gen motherboard (z490).
Here are multiple problems:
-> 9th gen is a lot cheaper. Mobo and CPU wise while basically having exactly the same performance for simracing!
-> 11th gen will probably be expensive and still worse than the AMD 5000 CPUs. The 11th gen Intels might have a little bit better performance for simracing but will be a lot hotter and less efficient...
Buying a 10th gen mobo+cpu now and then upgrade in a few months isn't really a great idea. 12th gen will need a new mobo and feature DDR5. And it probably comes out in Autumn 2021.
Solution:
We're all screwed
What I would do: get a 9600k + z390 board with good USB ports (Gigabyte is quite good. The gaming x has all features you need, good VRMs, 8x USB. Friend of mine has it, I have the 10600k with a z490 gigabyte gaming x. Basically same boards, we're both happy with them.)
EDIT: on newegg the reviews are quite bad for the z390 gaming x.. So maybe get an Asus board (way better BIOS!) and if you need more than 6x USB, buy one of the recommended USB extension cards. Since simracers often need a lot of USB ports, you'll find recommendations here).
And you'll just run that 9600k at 4.9 GHz or up to 5.1 GHz on all cores with a good cooler until it's not enough for you anymore.
Then buy Intel's 12th or 13th gen or AMD 6000 or whatever will be available then.
Pair it with a 650 or 750w psu to be able to slap some future graphics card or a bigger CPU in there and that's it.
I wouldn't buy faster RAM than 3200 cl16. It's good enough and from there the price curve becomes steep! And with a new generation, it'll need DDR5 anyway...
Case is difficult... Yes, it makes your life easier but there are very cheap cases that still do the job just fine.
I would buy a case from a known brand for sub 100€.
Be Quiet pure base DX, Fractal meshify C, something like that.
And another edit: 10600k is only 8 pounds more than the 9600k on newegg. In Germany it's a bigger difference.. Anyway, same Asus prime-A board is 133 for z390 and 177 for z490.
Might be worth it to be able to slap a 11600k in there in Summer?
About your linked ready-built PC:
- 9400f only boosts to 4.1 GHz.
- The mobo can't overclock memory so you're stuck at the 2666 MHz
The issue: simracing really needs a powerful CPU! You can always turn the graphics setting to make it look "bad" but run fluently and you can always buy a new GPU and just slap it into the PC.
But when your CPU can't run more than 10 opponent cars, it really sucks.
Here's a memory benchmark I did for Assetto Corsa Competizione:
That's 8.7 fps on memory alone! Or 10,1%.
Then every 9600k can easily run at 4.9 GHz all cores!
Most simracing titles run on 2-3 threads.
9400f = 4,0/3,9/3,9/3,8 GHz
So for simracing it would probably be running at 3.9 GHz.
That's 1 full GHz less compared to an easily overclocked 9600k...
That's 25.6% less performance.
For my ACC benchmark that would mean:
94,7 fps -> -25.6% = 70.5 fps -> -10.1% = 63.4 fps
That's 49,4% more for the 9600k
So in the end you'd have only barely enough fps for a 60 Hz monitor.
Price difference on newegg:
9400f = 149,99
9600k = 205,19
Mobos:
Gigabyte B365M DS3H = 65,99
Asus Prime Z390-P = 125,99 (that's the cheapest one.. But definitely still better than the B365...)
Summary:
331,18 vs 215,98 = 53,3% more for the 9600k.
Price vs performance, the read-built PC isn't bad.
My problem with this though is that a used 4770k built will give you the same fps and probably be cheaper...
Or get a 9600k build from gumtree or something?
Find the latest stuff for sale on Gumtree. See used items for sale from clothes,electricals, furniture to tickets and more.
www.gumtree.com