Balubish wrote:I would go with the second one and change the CPU to a 3770K cause the only difference between a 4770k and that is the inbuilt GPU and that you wont use with the R9 280X.
And the 280X is more like GTX 770 than the other build that you have chosen a GTX 760. And I know you game alot so for some future proofing the R9 280X is superb.
So I would go one generation older CPU and better GPU and hopefully you can buy a custom CPU cooler to the second one. Also keep in mind, mem speed dont really do that much. And for rendering a 3770k is better than the 3570k cause of the hyperthreading that I dont think are on the 3570k. So when rendering you get 8 cores instead of 4 if you go with a 3770k. i5 4 cores, i7 4 cores with hyperthreading = 8 logical cores for rendering and processes.
And as an R9 280X owner you will be able too run BF4 on Ultra at 1920x1080p and still got between 70-95fps basicly. TF2 150-300fps that are the roof off the game. Edit: Also keep in mind that the R9 have 3GB and for 1920x1080p it actually almost used all the mem for smooth gaming on full settings in most modern games, like BF4, Crysis 3, FarCry etc. Crysis 3 had a peak for me around 2.7GB or Vram usage.
The 3770k and 4770k are very very different CPUs. The difference goes far beyond the iGPU. The 3770k uses the older Intel microarchitecture "Ivy Bridge" while the 4770k uses the newer "Haswell" microarchitecture. Haswell is more power efficient with better throttling ability and will be a bit faster at the same clock speeds. More importantly though you are buying into a different chipset Z87/97 as opposed to Z77. Z87/97 offers many nice features like all SATA 6GBit/Sec ports as opposed to the slower SATA 3GBit/Sec ports of Z77. You also, on Z97, get M.2 support for storage, SATA Express 10GBit/Sec ports as well as a host of new features and improvements. It is really a much better platform. It will also allow you to upgrade to the new Intel "Broadwell" 14nm chips when they come out later in the year.
Again though, do you really need a "k" part? Will you be overclocking? Because if not I recommend you get a Xeon 1230V3. It is a Socket 1150 Xeon. Basically, it is an i7-4770 without the iGPU and $120 off. I have one and it is a great part.
You also haven't added in an aftermarket CPU Cooler or a case with very good airflow so it looks like you won't be overclocking anyway....
Also take a look at the AMD FX-8320/8350. I also have one of these. For gaming, video editing, rendering and H.264 encoding, it is an absolute beast and is right on par, usually, with the i7 Intel parts. It can also overclock like a monster. I'm running 5.0Ghz on mine no problem. I could push it to 5.2 but I really don't need the extra speed and I'm happy with my temperatures. The AMD build will be much cheater as the 8350 is only $160 and a good 990FX motherboard is only $110. The 8350 only falls down in Single Core performance but that really isn't too much of an issue now a days and even then it isn't slow by any means.
As for RAM I'd recommend 16GB. 8GB is fine for gaming but anything else you want 16GB. That being said, RAM is RAM. You don't need to spend a lot on it. RAM Speed, especially for gaming, doesn't matter. 1333 or 2133Mhz. Your games will run at the same FPS. It is important to note as speed goes up so does CAS latency. You want to find a balance between the two. Usually that balance is right around the 1600Mhz mark.
DO NOT GET AN SSDNOW!. While cheap they are crap. Kingston has been using subpar, reject flash in them. They are very slow, will never reach the rated speeds, have high failure rates and the Sandforce controller, which relies on compression, kinda crap. Get a Crucial M100 or better yet save up a little more and get a Samsung 840 Evo. I have one again and it is the best SSD I have ever used.
Do not get a WD Green either. The Greens are for power saving and only run at 5400RPM. They are very slow and also have higher failure rates. For the same price you could get a WD Caviar Blue which is much better.
Other than that the build looks good. Although you don't need an optical drive.
What about an OS?
As for the GPU do not get a nVidia card. At every price point where AMD and nVidia compete AMD wins. The 290 is cheaper and faster than a 780. The 280X is cheaper and faster than a 770. The 280 Cheaper and faster than a 760.
Some Options:
Kick ass non overclocking build:
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/GxMKK8You get a Xeon 1230v3, 16GB of RAM, a 120Gb SSD and a 1TB HDD as well as an R9 290 and a copy of Windows for $1113.
OCing i7 build.
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/zxMKK8Over budget by $80 and you get a 280X. Really wouldn't recommend. But if you must OC and must have an i7 this is what I'd do.
Ocing FX 8350 build:
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/nktqP6OCing and an R9 290.
Personally I would go with the Xeon. Really fast and a good value.