The PC Build and Gaming Performance
I'm going to start by saying that I do not have vsync on for any of these tests, you're about to see screen tearing in some of these games. I recommend turning vsync on and that will eliminate 99% of it.
I'll be back for the very last game cuz I had a few issues for good job keeping the great job keep it up I good spee damn it is in a car you saage so like I mentioned earlier I did have an issue with After Burner and that was specifically with Apex Legends. I guess the new update killed the overlay feature but fraps was working so I can't get the minimum average and things like that.
But overall, I was actually really surprised at how smooth it did run even though we're at 7 20p low I was expecting a much lower frame rate than this. I also ran into another issue now I believe it has to do with the update that I'm using now on the game but it crashed on me so I couldn't even get into battle here it's definitely not due to the chip because I have tested this in the past on the 2200g and the 2400g successfully. I've played through a few games on each of those CPUs so it's just got something to do with the update that's going on right now.
I tested a couple of other games but I forgot to turn on my game capture and I really didn't want want to go back to do it. So here's the Benchmark results for Resident Evil 2 the Remake 1080p low settings and 720p low settings. And just because I know I'm going to be asked about it, here's Fortnite 1080p medium settings. It's okay but I recommend going down to 720p medium settings or you could do 1080 low.
Overall in my opinion this is an awesome budget starter PC there's tons of upgradeability here since we're using that b450 motherboard you could always upgrade to the 2600 or even a 2700 if you followed the initial build to a t. You have a big enough power supply to add a nice dedicated GPU down the road and we could do that with the 2200g this CPU will perform awesomely with the right GPU for 1080p 60 FPS or above gaming.
Speaking of a dedicated video card, I do have part three on the way but I need your opinion what card should I put in here. I have three choices here now I know there's going to be a lot of people who want me to do a 580 but unfortunately I don't have one in my possession and I seriously don't feel like buying one.
These are the three cards that I have for this build, I have 2080s 2070s 2060s. A 2080 TI that I could throw in here but I want to keep it as budget friendly as possible so this is what I'm asking you guys let me know in the comments below which one of these cards I should use for this build.
I know I could go through and do all three of these cards and Benchmark them and to tell you the truth all three of these cards are going to perform fine at 1080p. I just kind of want to get your opinion on what you want to see in here first. I have an ASRock rx59 8 GB this is the Phantom gaming Edition, the Asus GTX 1660 this is the non-ti variant with 6 GB of gddr5.
I've yet to even test this card I've actually had it for a few days as of making this video I just really haven't had the time to do it because I've been busy with this build and finally an older gigabyte GTX 1060 6 GB variant now remember we're starting out with this PC that costs $350 to build.
The ASRock rx590 is $220 on New Egg as of making this video, the GTX 1660 is 225 and you can get a used 1066 GB for around $160 on eBay but in the end it's really going to come down to what you guys want to see in this rig. I'll eventually do a dedicated video with one of these GPUs in this new PC so let me know which GPU you want to see running in this rig in the comments below.
That's pretty much it for this video guys, keep an eye on the channel for part three if you haven't watched part one link is in the description. If you could hit that like button maybe think about subscribing to the channel to stay up to date on things like this always thanks for watching
"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enwhat's going on guys this ETA Prime back here again recently I posted a video on how to build a $350 gaming PC that was part one the build this is part two the test so if you haven't watched part one I will leave a link in the description but I'm going to give you a quick Refresh on the specs here total cost on this build was $347 for the CPU I'm using a ryzen 3 2200g 8 GB of ddr4 3000 MHz Ram G abte microatx b450 motherboard thermal H17 case thermal take 500 W power supply and a Kingston 240 GB SSD I'm going to leave links in the description for all the parts used in this build I also have a part three coming up where we add a dedicated GPU and speaking of that at the end of this video I kind of need your help I need to get your opinion on What GPU to use I got a few choices here but that'll be up at the end of the video so with all that out of the way let's get into testing all right so here it is we have the AMD ryzen 3 2200g stock clocks 3.5 GHz a will Turbo up to 3.7 8 GB of ddr4 3000 MHz RAM and the built-in Vega 8 GPU now I did go into the BIOS and dedicate an extra gigaby of ram here so we have 2 GB of vram but that's the only thing I changed so I know this was a lowerin gaming PC build but on my gaming PC I still do everyday task like surf the web watch YouTube videos and everything like that so I'm just going to test a 4K YouTube video here everything's been super smooth with this PC so far we have zero drop frames here on this 4K YouTube video and if you want to install Cody to view your 1080P and 4K movies the setup's going to work fine for that also so now I want to get into a few of my favorite Benchmark applications I've been doing a lot of PC builds lately so I'm going to have some results from those other builds ranging from the 2400g to the ryzen 2600 and even an i38100 first up we have geekbench this is strictly CPU performance here as you can see at the top we have the ryzen 2200g single core 3756 multicore 10,43 moving down the list a little bit we start getting better scores but those are more expensive CPUs and if we take a look at the ryzen 2400g versus the 22 if we overclock this 22 we could match or even exceed those numbers there but there's no way we're going to get anywhere near the 2600 with a multi-core of 2,468 and a single core of 4363 this is a much more powerful CPU with six cores and 12 threads I recently did a $850 build on a ryzen 2600 and an RTX 2060 if you're interested in checking that video out I'll leave a link in the description here we have cinebench R15 now having extra thread like the 2400g or the 2600 is going to help out tremendously with this Benchmark here but the 2200g scored a 566 2400 was 798 2600 was 1274 and the i38100 was a bit above the 2200g with 568 and finally for the CPU test I ran a blender BMW render test 2200g 3 minutes 29 seconds 24 00 2 minutes 30 seconds 2600 1 minute 35 and the i38100 came in at 3 minutes and 10 seconds and again with this test having extra cores and threads really helps out as you can see the 2400g was about a minute faster than the 2200 and that's mainly because it has four extra threads so when rendering it'll render eight blocks at a time instead of four like the 2200g does now it's time to get into some gameplay as you can see in the top leftand corner I do have afterburner running for a majority of these games I did have an issue with one of them at the end the name of the game resolution and settings will also be listed on screen so you know exactly what's going on at any given time I personally don't play DotA so I'm not sure if this was a good test or not I did try a benchmark but I couldn't get it running correctly so I just jumped into game real quick there is a lot of stuff going on but I've seen tournaments where there's much more so there is a chance you could get a lower frame rate that I'm getting getting here in a bigger battle but we're also at medium settings and 1080p so all you would have to do is drop a couple of the settings down to low and you'll be good to go another thing I'd like to mention here is I do not have vsync on for any of these tests you're about to see so you will see screen tearing in some of these games I recommend turning vsync on and that will eliminate 99% of it I'm going to stop talking now everything you need to know is on screen I will be back for the very last game cuz I had a few issues for good job keeping the great job keep it up I good spee damn it is in a car you saage so like I mentioned earlier I did have an issue with After Burner and that was specifically with Apex Legends I guess the new update killed the overlay feature but fraps was working so I can't get the minimum average and things like that but overall I was actually really surprised at how smooth it did run even though we're at 7 20p low I was expecting a much lower frame rate than this I also ran into another issue now I believe it has to do with the update that I'm using now on the game but it crashed on me so I couldn't even get into battle here it's definitely not due to the chip because I have tested this in the past on the 2200g and the 2400g successfully I've played through a few games on each of those CPUs so it's just got something to do with the update that's going on right now I tested a couple of other games but I forgot to turn on my game capture and I really didn't want want to go back to do it so here's the Benchmark results for Resident Evil 2 the Remake 1080p low settings and 720p low settings and just because I know I'm going to be asked about it here's fortnite 1080p medium settings it's okay but I recommend going down to 720p medium settings or you could do 1080 low so overall in my opinion this is an awesome budget starter PC there's tons of upgradeability here since we're using that b450 motherboard you could always upgrade to the 2600 or even a 2700 if you followed the initial build to a t you have a big enough power supply to add a nice dedicated GPU down the road and we could do that with the 2200g this CPU will perform awesomely with the right GPU for 1080p 60 FPS or above gaming and speaking of a dedicated video card I do have part three on the way but I need your opinion what card should I put in here I have three choices here now I know there's going to be a lot of people who want me to do a 580 but unfortunately I don't have one in my possession and I seriously don't feel like buying one now these are the three cards that I have for this build I have 2080s 2070s 2060s a 2080 TI that I could throw in here but I want to keep it as budget friendly as possible so this is what I'm asking you guys let me know in the comments below which one of these cards I should use for this build I know I could go through and do all three of these cards and Benchmark them and to tell you the truth all three of these cards are going to perform fine at 1080p I just kind of want to get your opinion on what you want to see in here first I have an ASRock rx59 8 GB this is the Phantom gaming Edition the Asus GTX 1660 this is the non-ti variant with 6 GB of gddr5 I've yet to even test this card I've actually had it for a few days as of making this video I just really haven't had the time to do it because I've been busy with this build and finally an older gigabyte GTX 1060 6 GB variant now remember we're starting out with this PC that costs $350 to build the ASRock rx590 is $220 on New Egg as of making this video the GTX 1660 is 225 and you can get a used 1066 GB for around $160 on eBay but in the end it's really going to come down to what you guys want to see in this rig I'll eventually do a benchmark with all of them but I do want to do a dedicated video with one of these gpus in this new pc so let me know which GPU you want to see running in this rig in the comments below that's pretty much it for this video guys keep an eye on the channel for part three if you haven't watched part one link is in the description if you could hit that like button maybe think about subscribing to the channel to stay up to date on things like this like always thanks for watchingwhat's going on guys this ETA Prime back here again recently I posted a video on how to build a $350 gaming PC that was part one the build this is part two the test so if you haven't watched part one I will leave a link in the description but I'm going to give you a quick Refresh on the specs here total cost on this build was $347 for the CPU I'm using a ryzen 3 2200g 8 GB of ddr4 3000 MHz Ram G abte microatx b450 motherboard thermal H17 case thermal take 500 W power supply and a Kingston 240 GB SSD I'm going to leave links in the description for all the parts used in this build I also have a part three coming up where we add a dedicated GPU and speaking of that at the end of this video I kind of need your help I need to get your opinion on What GPU to use I got a few choices here but that'll be up at the end of the video so with all that out of the way let's get into testing all right so here it is we have the AMD ryzen 3 2200g stock clocks 3.5 GHz a will Turbo up to 3.7 8 GB of ddr4 3000 MHz RAM and the built-in Vega 8 GPU now I did go into the BIOS and dedicate an extra gigaby of ram here so we have 2 GB of vram but that's the only thing I changed so I know this was a lowerin gaming PC build but on my gaming PC I still do everyday task like surf the web watch YouTube videos and everything like that so I'm just going to test a 4K YouTube video here everything's been super smooth with this PC so far we have zero drop frames here on this 4K YouTube video and if you want to install Cody to view your 1080P and 4K movies the setup's going to work fine for that also so now I want to get into a few of my favorite Benchmark applications I've been doing a lot of PC builds lately so I'm going to have some results from those other builds ranging from the 2400g to the ryzen 2600 and even an i38100 first up we have geekbench this is strictly CPU performance here as you can see at the top we have the ryzen 2200g single core 3756 multicore 10,43 moving down the list a little bit we start getting better scores but those are more expensive CPUs and if we take a look at the ryzen 2400g versus the 22 if we overclock this 22 we could match or even exceed those numbers there but there's no way we're going to get anywhere near the 2600 with a multi-core of 2,468 and a single core of 4363 this is a much more powerful CPU with six cores and 12 threads I recently did a $850 build on a ryzen 2600 and an RTX 2060 if you're interested in checking that video out I'll leave a link in the description here we have cinebench R15 now having extra thread like the 2400g or the 2600 is going to help out tremendously with this Benchmark here but the 2200g scored a 566 2400 was 798 2600 was 1274 and the i38100 was a bit above the 2200g with 568 and finally for the CPU test I ran a blender BMW render test 2200g 3 minutes 29 seconds 24 00 2 minutes 30 seconds 2600 1 minute 35 and the i38100 came in at 3 minutes and 10 seconds and again with this test having extra cores and threads really helps out as you can see the 2400g was about a minute faster than the 2200 and that's mainly because it has four extra threads so when rendering it'll render eight blocks at a time instead of four like the 2200g does now it's time to get into some gameplay as you can see in the top leftand corner I do have afterburner running for a majority of these games I did have an issue with one of them at the end the name of the game resolution and settings will also be listed on screen so you know exactly what's going on at any given time I personally don't play DotA so I'm not sure if this was a good test or not I did try a benchmark but I couldn't get it running correctly so I just jumped into game real quick there is a lot of stuff going on but I've seen tournaments where there's much more so there is a chance you could get a lower frame rate that I'm getting getting here in a bigger battle but we're also at medium settings and 1080p so all you would have to do is drop a couple of the settings down to low and you'll be good to go another thing I'd like to mention here is I do not have vsync on for any of these tests you're about to see so you will see screen tearing in some of these games I recommend turning vsync on and that will eliminate 99% of it I'm going to stop talking now everything you need to know is on screen I will be back for the very last game cuz I had a few issues for good job keeping the great job keep it up I good spee damn it is in a car you saage so like I mentioned earlier I did have an issue with After Burner and that was specifically with Apex Legends I guess the new update killed the overlay feature but fraps was working so I can't get the minimum average and things like that but overall I was actually really surprised at how smooth it did run even though we're at 7 20p low I was expecting a much lower frame rate than this I also ran into another issue now I believe it has to do with the update that I'm using now on the game but it crashed on me so I couldn't even get into battle here it's definitely not due to the chip because I have tested this in the past on the 2200g and the 2400g successfully I've played through a few games on each of those CPUs so it's just got something to do with the update that's going on right now I tested a couple of other games but I forgot to turn on my game capture and I really didn't want want to go back to do it so here's the Benchmark results for Resident Evil 2 the Remake 1080p low settings and 720p low settings and just because I know I'm going to be asked about it here's fortnite 1080p medium settings it's okay but I recommend going down to 720p medium settings or you could do 1080 low so overall in my opinion this is an awesome budget starter PC there's tons of upgradeability here since we're using that b450 motherboard you could always upgrade to the 2600 or even a 2700 if you followed the initial build to a t you have a big enough power supply to add a nice dedicated GPU down the road and we could do that with the 2200g this CPU will perform awesomely with the right GPU for 1080p 60 FPS or above gaming and speaking of a dedicated video card I do have part three on the way but I need your opinion what card should I put in here I have three choices here now I know there's going to be a lot of people who want me to do a 580 but unfortunately I don't have one in my possession and I seriously don't feel like buying one now these are the three cards that I have for this build I have 2080s 2070s 2060s a 2080 TI that I could throw in here but I want to keep it as budget friendly as possible so this is what I'm asking you guys let me know in the comments below which one of these cards I should use for this build I know I could go through and do all three of these cards and Benchmark them and to tell you the truth all three of these cards are going to perform fine at 1080p I just kind of want to get your opinion on what you want to see in here first I have an ASRock rx59 8 GB this is the Phantom gaming Edition the Asus GTX 1660 this is the non-ti variant with 6 GB of gddr5 I've yet to even test this card I've actually had it for a few days as of making this video I just really haven't had the time to do it because I've been busy with this build and finally an older gigabyte GTX 1060 6 GB variant now remember we're starting out with this PC that costs $350 to build the ASRock rx590 is $220 on New Egg as of making this video the GTX 1660 is 225 and you can get a used 1066 GB for around $160 on eBay but in the end it's really going to come down to what you guys want to see in this rig I'll eventually do a benchmark with all of them but I do want to do a dedicated video with one of these gpus in this new pc so let me know which GPU you want to see running in this rig in the comments below that's pretty much it for this video guys keep an eye on the channel for part three if you haven't watched part one link is in the description if you could hit that like button maybe think about subscribing to the channel to stay up to date on things like this like always thanks for watching\n"