this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2023
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Gaming
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Thanks! Yeah, maybe I can consider a 6700xt and other minor upgrades, like getting a NVME, an extra 16GB of RAM...It's a relief knowing that the power supply will hold!
Check what speed your mobo is capable of with the nvme drive option. A blazing fast nvme drive is a relatively cheap way of getting some more response out of your PC. That and a newer GPU it'll feel like a whole new computer.
I have the same EVGA supply powering radeon RX 6800 without problems. I believe it would be fine even with today's highend.
Thanks a lot, this helps!
I second shapis's recommendation. I was still gaming on an Ivy Bridge CPU until recently. It wasn't until this year that games started giving me trouble at 1080p with medium settings, and that was mostly GPU related.
Your 16GB RAM might be fine for now. Most games I've played don't come close to that. Of course, it's easy enough to check while you're playing (or doing whatever other tasks you do).
Depending on your OS, your SATA SSD might even be fine. (Although NVMe prices have been and still seem to be dropping, so picking one up in a couple months isn't a bad idea if your motherboard can handle one.)
Read your motherboard manual carefully about what NVME types it supports in which M.2 slots and whether there are any gotchas.
Some M.2 slots take SATA (2 notches) as well as PCIe (1 notch), some only one type. You can't tell visually — you have to check the manual.
Some M.2 slots will disable a SATA cable connector if you use them.
Some M.2 slots will work at a slower speed if certain PCI slots have a card in them.
Thanks, it seems the M.2 takes SATA and PCIe. I have two slots for them. And it would seem its speed won't be affected. At any rate, I only have the GPU slot in use (and another small one for the WifiGig thingy for the wireless Vive).